COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
CRI joint computational biology meeting
Add to your list(s)
Send you e-mail reminders
Further detail
This meeting is a forum for all computational scientists at CRI , regardless of which group you work in. And if you don’t work computationally yourself, but want to learn more about how computational research looks like, this is a place for you too. The joint compbio meeting are held once a month in 215, on a Friday from 4-5pm. It will be either the first or second Friday of the month, always choosing a week that does not already contain a CB&G seminar. In each meeting, one or two speakers present their work for 20-25mins followed by a short discussion (followed maybe by a longer discussion during CRISES ). If you want to be sent updates on talks please add this series to your personal list (using the link “[your name]’s list” in the column on the left after logging in with your Raven account). If you have any other queries about this seminar series please contact Nick Shannon (@cancer.org.uk). If you have a question about this list, please contact: Florian Markowetz; Roland F Schwarz; Nicholas Shannon. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser. 0 upcoming talks and 17 talks in the archive. Please see above for contact details for this list. |
Other listsCambridge Food Security Forum Soft Condensed MatterTermly Meeting EMBL-EBI Science and Society ProgrammeOther talks'Honouring Giulio Regeni: a plea for research in risky environments' Simulating Electricity Prices: negative prices and auto-correlation Not Maggie's fault? The Thatcher government and the reemergence of global finance Peak Youth: the end of the beginning Cycles of Revolution in Ukraine Wetting and elasticity: 2 experimental illustrations ***PLEASE NOTE THIS SEMINAR IS CANCELLED*** From Euler to Poincare Liver Regeneration in the Damaged Liver 'Politics in Uncertain Times: What will the world look like in 2050 and how do you know? 'Ways of Reading, Looking, and Imagining: Contemporary Fiction and Its Optics' Localization estimates for hypoelliptic equations |