Similar Articles |
|
Industrial Physicist Jennifer Ouellette |
Bioinformatics moves into the mainstream An explosion of data is being tamed with new systems |
Bio-IT World July 11, 2002 Malorye Branca |
Deep Sequence Diving Like sailors of old, genomic data miners dream of discovering riches and fame. Given the recent improvements in analytics -- and a little more time -- they just might succeed. |
Bio-IT World January 21, 2005 |
Defining 'Integrative Genomics' Five experts from academia and industry discuss the burgeoning field of integrative genomics. |
Bio-IT World March 10, 2003 Mark D. Uehling |
Technology Overload Inundated with new IT tools and mountains of data, the pharmaceutical industry struggles to pull it all together. |
Bio-IT World July 11, 2002 Stephen T.C. Wong |
Neuro-IT Needs Integrated Infrastructure There are two major motivations for merging enterprise solutions into clinical neuroscience. The first is the need to scale up the capacity for data management. The second is the economic benefits of data sharing, software reuse, and infrastructure build-out while reducing costs. |
Bio-IT World November 14, 2003 Jeff Augen |
Making Information-Based Medicine Work A confluence of scientific discovery and high-throughput technology has made information-based medicine possible -- and imperative. |
Bio-IT World July 2005 David M. Evans |
Cellular Imaging Takes Drug Discovery to New Heights The potential applications and ultimate value of high-content screening (HCS) and cellular image analysis are limited only by the imagination and expertise of the drug discovery groups using them to probe gene function and cell behavior. |
Bio-IT World Dec 2006/Jan 2007 Kevin Davies |
The NextBio Thing in Bioinformatics NextBio, which this fall officially introduced its platform after a year of beta testing by a handful of select organizations, aims to provide high-throughput information to researchers without them having to learn anything. |
HHMI Bulletin Fall 2012 Ivan Amato |
The View from Here "Every major advance in imaging technology precipitates a new round of breakthroughs in cell biology," says structural biologist Grant Jensen, an HHMI investigator at the California Institute of Technology. |
Bio-IT World December 15, 2003 Zachary Zimmerman |
Learning the Language of Systems Biology Geneticist par excellence David Botstein talks about his philosophy, science, his mission for integrative science, and what he deems a success for systems biology. |
CIO October 15, 2001 Stephanie Overby |
Drug Companies on speed The marriage of IT and medical research may be just what traditional pharmaceutical companies need to survive in an increasingly competitive field. Learn how IT is bringing the pharmaceutical industry into the information age... |
HHMI Bulletin Fall 2012 R. John Davenport |
Hanchuan Peng: SmartScopes Even when he launched his career as an engineer and computer scientist, Hanchuan Peng was drawn to the beauty of biology. He is a leader in developing sophisticated ways to make sense of biological images. |
Bio-IT World August 2005 |
Project Summaries Summaries of candidates for Bio-IT World's "Best Practices 2005" projects. |
Industrial Physicist Apr/May 2003 Jennifer Oullette |
Switching from physics to biology Physicists in transition help shape biological theory. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2010 |
New live action microscopy lets scientists follow the first days of a zebrafish embryo's development The promise of live embryo imaging is unquestionable. Light-sheet microscopy will allow scientists for the first time to describe in detail the processes of development in complex vertebrates |
Bio-IT World July 2005 Stan Schwartz |
Trends in Digital Bioscience Imaging The author, a Nikon VP, reviews the improvements in digital imaging that have been achieved over the last 30 years. A new set of research tools is aimed at solving the bottlenecks commonly found in the drug discovery laboratory. |
Bio-IT World November 12, 2002 James Golden |
The Business of Bioinformatics The industry has reached an interesting crossroads. As an academic branch of learning, bioinformatics remains mostly what it always was, a cross-disciplinary endeavor between computer science and molecular biology. But bioinformatics as a money-making proposition has different criteria for success. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2013 Neil Savage |
Path Found to a Combined MRI and CT Scanner Omni-tomography could add together the advantages of several medical imaging technologies |
Chemistry World January 15, 2015 Emma Stoye |
Blowing up brain tissue with swelling polymer delivers sharper images A new microscopic technique that magnifies specimens by blowing them up like a balloon could make it easier to produce high resolution images of cells and tissues. |
Bio-IT World September 2006 John Russell |
Informatics Cornucopia Predictive Informatics, the hopeful title of a session at last month's Drug Discovery Technology & Development World Congress, remains an enticing but mostly elusive goal. Asked what systems biology would look in five years and what will constitute success, panelists offered the following. |
Bio-IT World November 2006 Kevin Davies |
Building a Bridge Over Pharma with IT More than 100 enthusiastic delegates bridging the full breadth of the drug development pipeline gathered recently for the second annual Bridging Pharma and IT conference. Here are some highlights. |
Bio-IT World August 13, 2002 Russell & Dodge |
Necessary Liaisons: Making Standards Work Caroline Kovac, IBM Corp.'s general manager for life sciences, talks about the need for standards and her take on the troubled informatics world. |
Bio-IT World June 12, 2002 Beth Schachter |
Informatics Moves to the Head of the Class The race is on to increase the quantity and quality of bio-IT training programs as government and academia bet the need will be great. Will the job market back up that bet? |
D-Lib May/Jun 2015 Xu & Wang |
Semantic Description of Cultural Digital Images: Using a Hierarchical Model and Controlled Vocabulary We propose a semantic description framework for content description, based on information needs and retrieval theory. The framework combines the semantic description with a domain thesaurus. |
Knowledge@Wharton |
From Skin Creams to Life Insurance to Medical Care, Biosciences Are the New Frontier of Business Opportunity Research in the biological sciences holds the potential for breakthroughs that could transform the world. But scientific advances also can be baffling and more than a little intimidating, especially for business people... |
Bio-IT World February 10, 2003 Salvatore Salamone |
Made in Manhattan A talk with the new head of the Computational Biology Center at Memorial Sloan-Kettering. |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 1, 2005 Zaborowski, Hammer & Lawler |
Informatics Rules How global computer systems helped far-flung research centers at Roche work together |
Chemistry World July 6, 2012 |
Protein power Tom Muir, professor of chemistry and molecular biology, Princeton University, US, is an expert in protein engineering and its application to studying cellular signalling networks. |
D-Lib May 2001 |
In Brief The Variable Media Initiative at the Guggenheim... Digital Imaging South Africa... A Contemporary Culture Virtual Archive in XML... Griffith Artworks CD-ROM Archival Project... Griffith University Art Collection on-line... etc. |
Bio-IT World February 2007 |
Bio*IT World's Coming Attractions 2007 Bio-IT World Conference & Expo preview -- Meet the Keynotes... Oracle Users... Systems are Go... Candid Camera... A Vital IT Alliance... Next Generation Informatics... etc. |
Chemistry World April 24, 2012 Rebecca Brodie |
Two in one technique for biological imaging A UK based team has combined two methods into a new technique to investigate cell-substrate interactions in biomedical research. |
Bio-IT World August 15, 2005 Robert M. Frederickson |
What's 'Post' About Postgenomic? Bioinformatics tools can help organize and study genomic sequences that were discovered in the '90s. The tools help with tasks like analyzing gene expression, predicting protein structure and function, and establishing networks of interacting protein in cells. |
Bio-IT World March 17, 2004 |
Systems Biology: Top-Down or Bottom-Up? Systems biology involves the representation and analysis of an intact biological system. Like many of the technological developments over the past 20 years, such as genomics, proteomics, combinatorial chemistry, and bioinformatics, pharma and medical communities hold high hopes that systems biology will help move molecular research closer to the practice of medicine. |
D-Lib August 2003 |
In Brief Building a More Meaningful Web: From Traditional Knowledge Organization Systems to New Semantic Tools... Information Visualization Interfaces for Retrieval and Analysis (IVIRA) Workshop Summary... Report on the "OAI Metadata Harvesting Workshop"... etc. |
D-Lib January 2000 Gail M. Hodge |
Best Practices for Digital Archiving: An Information Life Cycle Approach Digital information is fragile in ways that differ from traditional technologies, such as paper or microfilm. It is more easily corrupted or altered without recognition... |
Bio-IT World May 7, 2002 Malorye Branca |
In Silico Survivors Facing desperate times, bioinformatics companies revamp, refocus, or perish. |
Information Today July 16, 2009 Barbara Quint |
Springer Launches Innovative Publisher-Based Image Collection This is a massive collection of 1.6 million scientific, technological, and medical images includes photos, tables and figures, charts, graphs, histograms, and other illustrations. |
Bio-IT World November 2005 Salvatore Salamone |
I3C RIP Answers to why the Interoperable Informatics Infrastructure Consortium (I3C) quietly disappeared. |
Bio-IT World November 19, 2004 Kevin Davies |
The Book on Bioinformatics Research director David Mount talks about his new book "Bioinformatics: Sequence and Genome Analysis," sequence analysis, and teaching bioinformatics |
D-Lib December 2001 Christophe Blanchi |
Distributed Interoperable Metadata Registry Interoperability between digital libraries depends on effective sharing of metadata. Successful sharing of metadata requires common standards for metadata exchange... |
InternetNews January 9, 2008 Larry Barrett |
IBM, Mayo Clinic Open Imaging Research Center IBM's high-end imaging platforms and hardware will be used to improve the speed and clarity of medical images used by physicians and radiologists. |
D-Lib April 2002 Erik Duval |
Metadata Principles and Practicalities There is much confusion about how metadata should be integrated into information systems. How is it to be created or extended? Who will manage it? How can it be used and exchanged? Whence comes its authority? Can different metadata standards be used together in a given environment? |
D-Lib June 2002 Paul Shabajee |
Primary Multimedia Objects and 'Educational Metadata' A fundamental dilemma for developers of multimedia archives. |
Managed Care January 2005 Maureen Glabman |
Health Plans Strain To Contain Rapidly Rising Cost of Imaging PET, CT, MRI -- these and other imaging technologies are valuable but costly. Aetna, Cigna, and a few other plans lead in clamping down on unnecessary use. |
Bio-IT World September 2005 Alan Louie |
Molecular Imaging: Smarter and Better The expanding opportunity for molecular imaging (MI) technology to significantly improve drug development has not gone unobserved. Several drug development companies have added imaging capabilities to their arsenal of drug development tools. |
D-Lib February 2000 Atkins, Lyons, Ratner, Risher, et al. |
Reference Linking with DOIs: A Case Study Digital Object Identifiers enable readers to find content on the Internet with a persistent and reliable identifier. Hyperlinking between article bibliographies and the cited articles is a natural application of DOIs. |