New Coronascape tool will help unlock big-data insights for COVID-19
Scienmag
SEPTEMBER 17, 2020
Coronascape will enable scientists to […].
Scienmag
SEPTEMBER 17, 2020
Coronascape will enable scientists to […].
Scienmag
SEPTEMBER 24, 2020
DrBioRight uses natural-language interface to facilitate intuitive data analysis for broader research community Credit: The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center HOUSTON — A new data analysis tool developed by researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center incorporates a user-friendly, natural-language interface to allow (..)
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XTalks
APRIL 5, 2021
Bioinformaticians use a combination of mathematics, computer science and biology to help scientists make sense of the data gathered from research projects. The Human Genome Project could not have succeeded without the use of bioinformatics. Wondering which bioinformatics job is right for you? Bioinformatics Analyst.
Scienmag
JUNE 11, 2021
Credit: IPK/ Christoph Martin The enormous potential of Big Data has already been demonstrated in areas such as financial services and telecommunications. An international team of researchers led by the IPK Leibniz Institute has now tapped the potential of big data for the first time on a large scale for plant research.
pharmaphorum
MARCH 19, 2021
As data and digital technology become vital to every aspect of life sciences, the industry is increasingly looking beyond biologists, chemists, and doctors to drive its drug development – and finding that technology has a chief role to play in the future of medicine. on Big data: astronomical or genomical? ,
Scienmag
MARCH 30, 2021
The era of big data has inundated nearly all scientific fields with torrents of newly available data with the power to stimulate new research and enable inquiry at scales not previously possible.
pharmaphorum
SEPTEMBER 16, 2022
It was a time when “the potential for systematic understanding of complex biology was palpable”, a fascinating terrain wherein the “first bacterial genomes were being sequenced”, when microarray technology was in the early stages of being invented, and ‘genomics’ and ‘big data’ certainly weren’t on the tips of people’s tongues.
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