BIOINFORMATICS SEMINAR SERIES: FALL 2001 ST598B is a 1 credit seminar course (public is welcome) that meets at 4:30pm on Tuesdays in UNIV 101.



  • Fall 2000 seminar series speakers
  • Spring 2001 seminar series speakers
  • Fall 2001 seminar series speakers



    Tuesday, January 8, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    R.W. Doerge, Department of Statistics
    Organizational meeting of all participants. Everyone that is enrolled in the course should attend, everyone else is welcome as well.

    Tuesday, January 15, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Rick Westerman, Bioinformatics Specialist at the Genomics Initiative, Purdue University
    "Sequence comparison: what statisticians should know about the biologists' favorite tool"

    Tuesday, January 22, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Dr. Helen Kim , Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology Director, 2-D Proteomics Laboratory; UAB Mass Spectrometry Shared Facility University of Alabama at Birmingham
    "Proteomics analysis of brain protein changes induced by polyphenol-enriched dietary supplements" (No Abstract).

    Tuesday, January 29, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Dr. Veena , Department of Biology, Purdue University
    "Use of macroarray technology for the identification of plant genes that are differentially expressed during the initial stages of Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, Part One "

    Tuesday, February 5, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Dr. Jun Xie, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
    "Protein Motif Alignment: The Problem, Tools and Methodologies"

    Tuesday, February 12, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Dr. Ben Bowen, Lynx Theraputics, Inc., Hayward, CA
    "Novel approaches for complex trait analysis and target identification"

    Tuesday, February 19, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Drs Stan Gelvin, Veena, and Ms. Hongmei Jiang, Departments of Biology and Statistics, Purdue University
    "Use of macroarray technology for the identification of plant genes that are differentially expressed during the initial stages of Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, Part Two: the statistical analysis and interpretation "

    Tuesday, February 26, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Ms. Hua Tang, Department of Statistics, Stanford University
    "Frequentist estimation of coalescence times"


    Tuesday, March 5, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    CANCELED

    Tuesday, March 12, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    SPRING BREAK: NO SEMINAR




    Tuesday, March 19, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Dr. Jim Fleet (Department of Foods and Nutrition, Purdue University), Dr. Bruce Craig and Ms. Olga Vitek (Department of Statistics, Purdue University)
    "Gene expression profiling of intestinal cell differentiation: Biological and statistical issues"

    PLEASE NOTE THE CHANGE OF DATE:
    Myra Samuels Memorial Lecture
    To be held on THURSDAY March 28, 2002, West Faculty Lounge, Purdue Memorial Union Building, 4:30pm (reception will follow),
    Dr. John Quackenbush, The Institute for Genome Research (TIGR)
    "Back to the Future: Integrating Expression with Genomic, Genetic, and Metabolic Data"

    Tuesday, April 2, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Dr. Scott McLuckey, Department of Chemistry, Purdue University
    Collaborators: Gavin Reid, Jason Hogan, Min He, Kelly Newton, Paul Chrisman, Sharon Pitteri, Mitch Wells, Chris Doerge, Jim Zimmerman, Bob Santini, Hao Shang, Gil Lee, Peng Pan, Dawn Watson, Jin Wu, Ethan Badman, Jim Stephenson
    ``Rapid Protein Identification/Characterization based on Gas-Phase Ion Chemistry and Mass Spectrometry: Ion/Ion Proton Transfer Reactions and Protein Ion Dissociation''

    Tuesday, April 9, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Mr. Michael (Mik) Black, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
    ``Statistical Issues in the Design and Analysis of Spotted Microarray Experiments, with Applications to Studies of Arabidopsis Chromosome 4''


    Tuesday, April 16, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    Mr. Rick Westerman, Bioinformatics Specialist at the Genomics Initiative, Purdue University
    "What we have learned from a partial sequencing of a eubacterial genome"

    Tuesday, April 23, 2002 4:30pm, UNIV 101
    There is no seminar, and there is no final. Thank you for an enjoyable semester,