DATE |
NOM |
INSTITUT |
TITRE |
16.04.2021 |
Sergey Ovchinnikov |
Harvard University |
A unified framework for understanding and evaluating generative models of protein sequences |
16.04.2021 |
Jan Skotheim |
Stanford University |
Towards molecular mechanisms linking cell growth and division |
22.04.2021 |
Wallace Marshall |
UCSF |
Pattern formation and regeneration in a single cell |
29.04.2021 |
Gordon Berman |
Emory University |
Measuring the hidden dynamics of animal behavior |
06.05.2021 |
Alexander Rives |
Facebook AI research |
Biological structure and function emerge from scaling unsupervised learning to 250M protein sequences |
07.05.2021 |
Matthias Garten |
National Institutes of Health |
The Malaria Parasite – Red Blood Cell Interface: Installing Transport to Survive in an Organelle-free Host Cell |
20.05.2021 |
Katharina Ribbeck |
MIT |
Partners in Slime: How Mucus Regulates Microbial Virulence |
03.06.2021 |
Richard Neher |
University of Basel |
Tracking and predicting the evolution of human RNA viruses |
17.06.2021 |
Nikta Fakhri |
MIT Physics |
Broken symmetries in living matter |
01.07.2021 |
Shashi Thutupalli |
NCBS |
Surfing phage infections during a bacterial range expansion |
09.09.2021 |
Robert West |
EPFL |
Shedding light on lives with logs |
16.09.2021 |
Magnus Rattray |
Manchester University |
Gaussian process methods for single-cell and spatial transcriptomics |
23.09.2021 |
Lucy Colwell |
Cambridge University – Google |
Machine learning for biological sequence design with therapeutic applications |
15.10.2021 |
Hana El-Samad |
UCSF |
Build to Understand: the Secret Lives of BioCircuits |
28.10.2021 |
Marta Luksza |
Mount Sinai |
Immune selection and predictability of cancer evolution |
11.11.2021 |
Vahid Shahrezaei |
Imperial College London |
The cause and consequence of global gene expression scaling with cell size |
18.11.2021 |
Heinz Köppl |
TU Darmstadt |
From live cell fluorescence microscopy to moment-based variational inference |
25.11.2021 |
Edda Klipp |
HU Berlin |
Understanding a life – integration of time-resolved population and single cell data for a yeast cell from birth to division |