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- For a PDF of all Special Interest Group meetings click here.
Over the past 12 years a number of smaller, more specialized meetings in computational biology have become regularly associated with the ISMB annual meetings. This year ISMB/ECCB 2004 is pleased to have several special interest group meetings associated with the conference. For ISMB/ECCB 2004 there will be one day SIG’s and two day SIG’s. Please see the list below. The following are the fees for attending SIG’s. ONE DAY SIGS (those SIG’s that are being held for one day) Academic/Government/Non-profit - UK £80* Corporate -UK £110* Student/Post-Doc - UK £60* TWO DAY SIGS (those SIG’s that are being held for two days) Academic/Government/Non-profit - UK £120* Corporate - UK £165* Student/Post-Doc - UK £90* TWO DAY SIG with DINNER (only offered for "3Dsig: Structural Bioinformatics") Academic/Government/Non-profit - UK £150* Corporate - UK £200* Student/Post-Doc - UK £100* *NOTE: 17.5% VAT tax will be added to all fees |
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BioLink (click here to learn more) |
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Bioinformatics and Disease (click here to learn more) Bio-ontologies (click here to learn more) Genome Annotation (click here to learn more) WEB '04 (click here to learn more) |
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Bioinformatics and Statistical Physics (click here to learn more) BioPathways (click here to learn more) BOSC (click here to learn more) SIGSIM (click here to learn more) |
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3Dsig: Structural Bioinformatics (click here to learn more) |
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URL: http://www.pdg.cnb.uam.es/BioLink/ |
Date: Thursday, July 29 Start time: 09:00 Ending time: 17:00 | Location: Moat House Castle II & III |
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The BioLINK text mining SIG focuses on providing improved access to the biological literature and tools to help database curators with the maintenance of current and consistent biological databases. The 2004 SIG will focus on recent advances in this area and will include a report of the results from Critical Assessment of Information Extraction: BioCreAtIvE 2003. As in the past, the SIG will include a mix of invited and contributed papers and reports from related SIGs (BioOntologies, BioPathways) and relevant projects (e.g., BioMINT). Contact: Lynette Hirschman, lynette@mitre.org, The MITRE Corporation, 202 Burlington Rd., Bedford, MA 01730 USA, Phone: 781-271-7789 |
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URL: http://www.bioinformatics.ac.uk |
Date: Friday, July 30 Start time: 08:00 Ending time: 19:00 | Location: Moat House Island Suite |
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Bioinformatics has become a fundamental tool for understanding the molecular basis of disease. It is now commonplace for candidate drug targets to be both suggested and validated through genomic research. Expression profiles derived through microarray analysis routinely give insight into disease aetiology. The study of polymorphisms provides information on the basis of inherited disease and susceptibility to common disease. These are but a few examples. The CCP11 SIG on Bioinformatics and Disease will present keynote lectures from protagonists in the field. Primarily, however, it is an opportunity for young-blood scientists to present 20 minute talks on their bioinformatic success stories in this area. Abstracts of proposed talks should be submitted to the Programme Committee (see http://www.bioinformatics.ac.uk for details) who will then invite successful researchers to speak at the event. Contact: Hugh Morgan hmorgan2@hgmp.mrc.ac.uk |
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URL: http://bio-ontologies.man.ac.uk/ |
Date: Friday, July 30 Start time: 09:00 Ending time: 19:00 | Location: Moat House Castle II & III |
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The Annual Bio-Ontologies meeting has now been running for six consecutive years, as a SIG at ISMB. It covers all aspects of the use of ontologies to biological problems, including new applications of ontologies, and updates on previously published work. The meeting consists of a series of talks, with no formal peer review, or publication. The meeting is generally attended by around 100 delegates, and tends to be lively. As such its a good opportunity to gain early feedback on new work. The meeting is loosely themed; this years theme is "Ontologies and Images". We are now well used to annotating gene products and we've seen ontologies used in text analysis, but images are pervasive in bioinformatics -- how do we use ontologies to help us manage bio-images? Talks on this topic are especially encouraged, although not limited to this topic. The conference organisers are Robert Stevens, and Phillip Lord, from the University of Manchester, and Robin MacEntire and Jim Butler from GSK. Contact: bio-ontologies@lists.man.ac.uk |
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URL: http://www.pdg.cnb.uam.es/PRE-SIG/ |
Date: Friday, July 30 Start time: 08:30 Ending time: 17:00 | Location: SECC – Carron Room 2 |
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The one-day meeting will review the main activities in genome annotation, definition of biological function, use of database annotations, and genome annotation based genomic/proteomic information. Key scientists will present their views on the needs and possibilities in each one of these areas. The goal of the workshop is to create an open forum for the discussion of the current problems, to foster the analysis of key scientific issues, and to promote the collaboration among scientist interested in this key area of Molecular Biology. The EC funded BioSapiens network dedicated to the development of integrated strategies for the annotation of genomes will coordinate this first activity. Contact: Alfonso Valencia, Protein Design Group, CNB-CSIC, Centro Nacional de Biotecnologia, Cantoblanco Madrid 28049 Spain, valencia@cnb.uam.es |
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URL: http://surya.bic.nus.edu.sg/web04 |
Date: Friday, July 30 Start time: 08:30 Ending time: 17:00 | Location: SECC – Carron Room 1 |
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“Bioinformaticians are hard to find” is a complaint that is often uttered. We, the organizers of WEB '04, firmly believe that bioinformaticians are not born but made. Education and training in bioinformatics is crucial to the survival of this burgeoning field. WEB '04 focuses its attention on current issues facing bioinformatics education: curricula, course delivery: tools and infrastructure, training and pedagogy. Industry requirements are also essential to the development of successful educational programs. WEB '04 is the fourth meeting, following on from the successful WEB meetings held earlier at Copenhagen, Edmonton and Brisbane. If you are interested in bioinformatics education, WEB is the one-day SIG meeting for you. If you have something to say, we would love to hear from you. WEB '04 features an invited plenary speaker, short talks as well as posters. Oral and poster abstracts are due on April 16, 2004. Contact: Shoba Ranganathan (shoba@els.mq.edu.au) |
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URL: http://www.lifl.fr/~iri-bn/pages/SIG/ |
Dates: Thursday, July 29 through Friday, July 30 Start time: 09:00 Ending time: 18:00 | Location: SECC – Dochart Room |
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This SIG is a follow-up to the ECCB2002 satellite workshop with the same title, held in Saarbrücken (Germany, http://www.zbi.uni-saarland.de/ECCB2002/satellite/index.html). We invite contributions to bioinformatics from (statistical) physics-based methods. Topics include: DNA, RNA, gene prediction, microarrays, protein interactions, biological networks (metabolic, signal transduction, gene regulation), population dynamics, evolution. In particular, the 2004 edition has a special topical focus on the use of nanotechnology for the generation of novel data in bioinformatics. We thus especially encourage contributors to suggest corresponding topics of relevance for genomics, proteomics and cellomics. Contributors should send their abstracts to: ralf.blossey@iemn.univ-lille1.fr. Contact : Dr. Ralf Blossey, ralf.blossey@iemn.univ-lille1.fr, Interdisciplinary Research Institute, Biological Nanosystems Group, c/o IEMN, Cité Scientifique – Avenue Poincaré BP 69, 59652 Villeneuve d’Ascq, France |
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URL: http://www.biopathways.org/events/ISMB04-CFP.html |
Dates: Thursday, July 29 through Friday, July 30 Start time: 09:00 Ending time: 19:00 | Location: SECC – Boisdale Room |
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Description: Coming Soon Contacts: aregev@cgr.harvard.edu and vs@genoscope.cns.fr |
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URL: http://open-bio.org/bosc2004/ |
Dates: Thursday, July 29 through Friday, July 30 Start time: 09:00 Ending time: 19:00 | Location: SECC – Alsh Room |
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The 5th annual Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC'2004) is organized by the not-for-profit Open Bioinformatics Foundation (http://open-bio.org). The meeting will take place July 29-30, 2004 in Glasgow, Scotland and is one of several Special Interest Group (SIG) meetings occurring in conjunction with the 12th International Conference on Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology. The focus of the meeting will be on current and emerging open source informatics tools and toolkits. BOSC provides a forum for developers, project groups, users and interested parties to meet personally, exchange ideas and collaborate together. Keynote speeches from well known Open Source Bioinformatics leaders are being planned. Contact: Darin London dlondon@ebi.ac.uk or bosc@open-bio.org |
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URL: http://biosim.genebee.msu.su/sigsim_en.php |
Dates: Thursday, July 29 through Friday, July 30 Start time: 09:00 Ending time: 19:00 | Location: Moat House Hotel Argyle Suite 1 |
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One of challenges in the modern biology is that a huge amount of biological data should be integrated and analyzed to plan new series of wetlab or clinical experiments. The range, quality, and level of biological complexity are very different and ambiguous. The new knowledge covers different biological entities and processes, from genes, molecular mechanisms of DNA repair transcription factors to toxicogenomics and personalized medicines. Ultimately, all information fluxes should be combined, and analyzed together to give a real understanding of biological process and to find the best therapeutical intervention. Pathways reconstruction and mathematical modeling of cellular processes is one of possible ways to tackle this complex problem. Contact: Prof Igor Goryanin, Igor.Goryanin@gsk.com, GlaxoSmithKline, Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, UK SG1 2NY |
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URL: http://3dsig.weizmann.ac.il/ |
Dates: Thursday, July 29 Start time: 08:45 Ending time: 22:00 Friday, July 30 Start time: 09:00 Ending time: 18:30 | Location: SECC – Lomond Suite |
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Description: We are happy to announce the first 2-day special interest group meeting on Structural Bioinformatics. Previous ISMB conferences have had many attendees interested in the field, but lacked a session devoted to it. The time is ripe to initiate a tradition of a focused meeting on aspects associated with 3D bioinformatics. These include topics such as: structural databases, structure representation, secondary structure and domain assignment, 3D data-mining, 3D programming modules, structure-based function prediction, membrane protein assembly, role of geometry and of energetics in protein structure and function, docking and protein-protein/ligand interaction prediction, structure prediction, structural genomics. A combination of plenary lectures, short presentations and structured panels/discussions should provide a good anchor for a program in which scientists in the field will be able to interact. Contacts: Ilan Samish (3Dsig@weizmann.ac.il); Marvin Edelman |
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