BiNHum ist ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt des Humboldt-Rings vertreten durch die naturhistorischen Forschungssammlungen und Museen in Berlin, Bonn, Karlsruhe, München und Stuttgart. . Im September 2009 haben sich das Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (MNHU), das Staatliche Museum für Naturkunde Karlsruhe (SMNK), das Staatliche Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart, die Staatlichen Naturwissenschaftlichen Sammlungen Bayerns (SNSB), das Zoologische Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig in Bonn (ZFMK) und der Botanische Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem (BGBM) zum Humboldt-Ring zusammengeschlossen, um eine Zusammenarbeit zu intensivieren und um Synergien im Sinne einer Großforschungsinfrastruktur zu erzeugen bzw. nutzen zu können. In BiNHum soll die IT-Komponente zur objektbezogenen Sammlungsdigitalisierung im Verbund abgedeckt werden. Folgende Schwerpunkte werden dabei bearbeitet: (1) Lokalisierung und Aufarbeitung bereits vorhandener digitaler Datenbestände, die aufgrund abgebrochener oder temporärer Initiativen nicht (mehr) zugänglich oder sogar gefährdet sind. (2) Test, Anpassung und Anbindung verfügbarer IT-Lösungen sowie Unterstützung der Projektpartner im Verbund bzgl. Anpassung, Standardisierung und Anbindung der schon verfügbaren bzw. der neu zu erhebenden Datenbestände, z.B. im Projekt MORPHYLL am SMNS, DFG FKZ RO 3250/21 (Erfassung von ökophysiologisch und klimatisch relevanten morphologisch-anatomischen Details fossiler Blattreste). (3) Entwicklung und Erprobung international verwendbarer Standards zur Digitalisierung von Sammlungsobjekten, für die diese noch nicht verfügbar sind; einerseits methodisch, wie z.B. standardisierte Ansichten von Objekten (Vergleichbarkeit), andererseits zur Verwaltung digitaler Datentypen, für die es noch keine Vorgaben gibt, z.B. Soundfiles oder 3D-Objekte. (4) Entwicklung eines Internetportals für den Humboldt-Ring, das es ermöglicht, sämtliche Datenbestände institutionsübergreifend verfügbar und recherchierbar zu machen, inkl. bisher international noch nicht verfügbarer Medienfiles. (5) Nutzung bestehender Infrastruktur im IT-Bereich, z.B. eines am BGBM über GBIF Deutschland bereitgestellten Imageservers. ... [Information des Anbieters]
Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) will hold its 2015 annual conference 28 September to 3 October 2015 in Nairobi, Kenya. This is TDWG’s first conference in Africa! The theme of the conference is Applications, Standards and Capacity Building for Sustaining Global Biodiversity. Subprograms will include: Digitization, Semantic Technologies, Phyloinformatics, Outreach and Collaboration, ePublications, Trait Data, and Conservation informatics. ... [Information of the supplier]
ISMB/ECCB 2015 will bring together scientists from a wide range of disciplines, including molecular biology, biology, medicine, computer science, mathematics and statistics. [Information of the supplier]
This call is an invitation to scientists and professionals working in the fields of bioinformatics and computational biology to submit high quality original posters for presentation at GLBIO 2015. [Information of the supplier]
Welcome to the thirteenth annual Rocky Mountain Bioinformatics Conference, a meeting of the International Society for Computational Biology (ISCB). The organizers hope that you enjoy the program, and find the conference a productive opportunity to meet researchers, students and industrial users of bioinformatics technology. The Rocky series began thirteen years ago as a regional conference, and has grown into an international program with a spotlight on regional development in the computational biosciences. The presenters of the Rocky conference are scientists representing a broad spectrum of universities, industrial enterprises, government laboratories, and medical libraries from around the world. The meeting is a chance to get to know your colleagues near and far, seek collaborative opportunities, and find synergies that can drive our field forward. We hope you enjoy the science, the company, and the spectacular scenery of the Rocky Mountains. Welcome! ... [Information of the supplier]
The 21st Century is arguably the age of biosciences, and centre stage to this projection is the maturing of genomically powered approaches to all kinds of fundamental and applied questions. The next few decades will undoubtedly see a substantial increase in the number and diversity of species with sequenced genomes, as well as the exploration of variation of genomes across populations, different environments and over evolutionary time, and this will greatly empower integrative and comparative biosciences. The last five years have seen significant contributions to understanding of the evolution of vertebrate complexity, and how physiology of lower vertebrates can be advanced and specialized through successive rounds of genome duplications. This session will focus on these recent genomic achievements and how they empower a more comprehensive understanding of evolutionary and physiological adaptations. ... [Information of the supplier]
As of February 2015, iDigBio (https://www.idigbio.org/) has ingested more than 25 million specimens and 4 million media objects from biodiversity collections with world-wide range. This great resource of biodiversity information has been made accessible not only through the iDigBio portal, but also through Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) that any application can consume since 2013. iDigBio is hosting a 3-day hackathon (June 3-5, 2015) in Gainesville, FL, to engage the community in developing applications that can facilitate biodiversity scientific workflows and information that use data, ingestion and search APIs. PhyloJIVE is an example of such tool that integrates biodiversity data with phylogeny by using the iDigBio search API to retrieve species and induced-trees API of OpenTree to generate a phylogenetic tree for those species. ... [Information of the supplier]
Celebrating the 20th anniversary of the IPCAT conference series, IPCAT 2015 aims to bring together researchers from the biological, physical, computational and mathematical sciences who have a common interest in the nature of biological information processing. We welcome both those who are interested in understanding biological systems and those who are interested in applying biological principles within artificial systems. This year's conference will take place in the biomedical hub city of San Diego, California. ... [Information of the supplier]
Mathematical and computational tools and concepts form an essential basis for modern evolutionary studies. The rise of sound statistical and combinatorial approaches in evolutionary and genome biology has offered considerable improvements beyond the original ad hoc approaches, providing new methods and algorithms to handle ever-growing data sets. Such advances require an increasingly sophisticated mathematical treatment of the problems at hand and the reliance on faster algorithms and computers in order to answer important biological questions. The theme of this year’s edition will be "New Data, New Questions, New Methods". New generation sequencing techniques have multiplied not just the amount, but also the types of genetic data produced (e.g. RNA-seq, single-cell sequencing, ChIP-seq, Hi-C, ancient DNA, RAD-seq…), giving rise to new questions, and new methodologies to answer them. These methodologies are often cross-disciplinary, with applications to diverse research topics such as gene expression, cancer, development, genome evolution, epigenetics. General concepts, models, methods and algorithms will be presented and discussed, just as during the previous conference editions. To present the recent advances in the field and discuss open questions and problems, the meeting will bring together researchers originating from various disciplines: mathematics, computer science, phylogenetics and population genetics. Keynote speakers will introduce a field of research and discuss their own work in this field (see below). Afternoon will be for short presentations and posters, with plenty of time for discussions. We will stop early every day, thus leaving time for other activities, such as hiking, snorkeling or simply lying on the beach. The number of attendees will be limited, so as to favor small group interaction. ... [Information of the supplier]
Die modularisierte Diversity Workbench (=DWB) ist eine Virtuelle Forschungsumgebung für verschiedene wissenschaftliche Aufgaben im Bereich von Management und Analyse von Life Science Daten. Sie bietet den Rahmen für die Archivierung von Biodiversitäts- und Geodiversitätsdaten und erleichtert die Verarbeitung von ökologischen, molekularbiologischen, Beobachtungs-, Sammlungs- und taxonomischen Daten. ... [Information des Anbieters, übersetzt]