[Bioperl-l] Course Announcement: 2009 CSHL Computational and Comparative Genomics Deadline
William Pearson
wrp at virginia.edu
Thu Jul 2 23:56:07 UTC 2009
Course announcement - Application deadline, July 15, 2009
Cold Spring Harbor
COMPUTATIONAL & COMPARATIVE GENOMICS
November 4 - 10, 2009
Application Deadline: July 15, 2009
INSTRUCTORS:
Pearson, William, Ph.D., University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA
Smith, Randall, Ph.D., SmithKline Beecham Pharmaceuticals, King of
Prussia, PA
Lisa Stubbs, Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urbana, IL
Beyond BLAST and FASTA - Alignment: from proteins to genomes - This
course presents a comprehensive overview of the theory and practice of
computational methods for extracting the maximum amount of information
from protein and DNA sequence similarity through sequence database
searches, statistical analysis, and multiple sequence alignment, and
genome scale alignment. Additional topics include identifying signals
in unaligned sequences, integration of genetic and sequence
information in biological databases. This year, there will be a
special focus on metagenomics and functional prediction.
The course combines lectures with hands-on exercises; students are
encouraged to pose challenging sequence analysis problems using their
own data. The course makes extensive use of local WWW pages to present
problem sets and the computing tools to solve them. Students use
Windows and Mac workstations attached to a UNIX server.
The course is designed for biologists seeking advanced training in
biological sequence analysis, computational biology core resource
directors and staff, and for scientists in other disciplines, such as
computer science, who wish to survey current research problems in
biological sequence analysis and comparative genomics.
The primary focus of the Computational and Comparative Genomics Course
is the theory and practice of algorithms used in computational
biology, with the goal of using current methods more effectively and
developing new algorithms. Cold Spring Harbor also offers a
"Programming for Biology" course, which focuses more on software
development.
For additional information and the lecture schedule and problem sets
for the 2008 course, see:
http://fasta.bioch.virginia.edu/cshl/
To apply to the course, fill out and send in the form at:
http://meetings.cshl.edu/course/courseapp_instr.shtml
Bill Pearson
wrp at virginia.edu
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