Evolution Meeting 2019

Chris Smith: Evolution Meeting

June 25, 2019

I just got back from the Evolution Meeting in Providence and I鈥檓 full of information and ideas for research. I had the opportunity to reconnect with past colleagues and meet some new people. Other CU 麻豆影院 folks attended, including the labs of Dan Doak, Nancy Emery, Nolan Kane, Stacy Smith,...

Kristin Calahan

World Congress of Biomechanics 鈥 Dublin, Ireland

Oct. 24, 2018

This summer, I had the opportunity to present my research at the 2018 World Congress of Biomechanics in Dublin, Ireland. As the premier meeting worldwide in the field of biomechanics, this was an incredible opportunity to network with scientists in this field, both within my subfield of biomechanics and far...

Katia Tarasava

Curiosity killed the cat, but it may help you get the Nobel prize

March 16, 2017

I don't feel frightened by not knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without having any purpose - which is the way it really is so far as I can tell - it does not frighten me. 鈥揜ichard Feynman, The Pleasure of Finding Things Out Doctoral students have...

Jacqueline Wentz

SIAM Life Sciences Conference in Boston

Oct. 13, 2016

This July I attended the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) Conference on the Life Sciences in Boston. It was four days long, packed with talks, poster sessions, and unnecessary amounts of coffee. At the conference, I presented a poster on my latest research examining a molecular mechanism that...

April Goebl

My experience with Evolution

Aug. 29, 2016

Attending Evolution, the premier international conference for evolutionary biology, had a big influence on my recently spawned, yet still vague, choice to pursue a career in evolutionary biology. Held in Austin, Texas this year and the largest conference in its field, Evolution is a joint event for three major societies:...

Daniel Malmar

Computing Machinery and Mouse Genomes

March 9, 2015

I recently attended the 2014 Association for Computing Machinery Conference on Bioinformatics, Computational Biology, and Health Informatics (ACM BCB) with fellow IQ Biology student Joey Azofeifa and our advisor Robin Dowell. The conference had many interesting talks, ranging from theory-heavy explanations of algorithm improvements to very applied talks on using...

Joey Azofeifa

Science is Hard

Nov. 17, 2013

It must be said that I have had a very difficult time writing this blog-post. The reason, after a few too many cups of coffee, came clear to me: Science is Hard (and I worried if that鈥檚 what I should tell my readers). Certainly there are intellectual struggles in Science,...

Nora Connor

On the leading edge

Sept. 5, 2013

Studying Quantitative Genomics in Italy I returned this past weekend from a conference and workshop called Quantitative Laws of Genome Evolution in Lake Como, Italy. An Italian physicist named Marco Lagomarsino created the conference, which brought together an interdisciplinary group of statistical physicists, biophysicists, chemists and biologists to talk about...

ribozyme

Understanding RNA

July 15, 2013

The newly constructed structure in the National Botanical Gardens in Ireland, meant to symbolize the flow of information from DNA to RNA and proteins, contains a representation of the DNA double helix, a ribosome, and thehammerhead ribozyme. Sculptures of the DNA helix have been constructed all over the world ;...

Ryan Langendorf

Interdisciplinarity on Steroids

Feb. 5, 2013

At my last mentoring committee meeting, after discussing the tug-of-war that the Environmental Studies and IQ Biology programs have been playing with my schedule, Dr. Brett Melbourne paused and quietly commented that my life is 鈥渋nterdisciplinarity on steroids!鈥 We all laughed, but sometimes I lose sight of how many worlds...

Pages