I am a professor at Kyoto Prefectural University. My current research interests focus on characterization of metabolic regulatory networks and integrated analysis of multi-omics data in plants. I am a member of the editorial board for BMC Genomics, Plant Methods, Frontiers in Plant Science, Plants, BioTech, and PeerJ.
Tarek Gaber is a Senior Lecturer and Programme Leader for the MSc in Cyber Security at the School of Science, Engineering & Environment, University of Salford. Dr. Gaber received his PhD in Computer Science, with a focus on Information Security, from the University of Manchester in 2012. He has held positions at several universities, including the University of Manchester, UK; Suez Canal University, Egypt; and VSB Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic. Over the past three years, he has secured a total of £600 in funding to support his research from various public funding bodies, including Innovate UK, GCHQ, and UKAEA. This funding has facilitated the development of software tools (in AI and Cybersecurity) based on his published articles. Dr. Gaber has served as a Keynote Speaker and Co-chair at several international conferences.
Luiz Gadelha works in the German Human Genome-Phenome Archive (GHGA) at the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) in Germany and the National Laboratory for Scientific Computing (LNCC) in Brazil. He received his D.Sc. degree in Computer and Systems Engineering from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He has been involved in the research and development of parallel and distributed scientific workflow management systems and scientific databases. He has participated in research projects in the bioinformatics and biodiversity application areas. His main research interests are scientific data management, computational reproducibility, and high performance computing.
Aleksandra is a PostDoc at IMES Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), specializing in chromatin architecture analysis using Hi-C, Micro-C, and imaging data. Notable for contributing to Open2C software with the Open Chromosome Collective. Currently, Aleksandra explores polymer simulations of chromatin in early embryogenesis of vertebrates. Her focus centers on understanding the biological implications of various 3D genome structures and their connection to cell fate decisions.
Dr. Jianye Ge is the Associate Director of the Center for Human Identification and an Associate Professor in the Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Genetics at the University of North Texas Health Science Center. His research relates primarily to forensic genetics, bioinformatics, and data mining. The software programs he developed have been used by the Federal and State government agencies to assist in solving criminal cases.
Vice-Director for Science at the Kharkevich Institute for Information Transmission Problems. Professor of the Lomonosov Moscow State University, Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, and Higher School of Economics. Member of Academia Europaea. Recipient of the 2007 Baev Prize of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Member of Editorial Boards of PeerJ and Biology Direct.
Associate Director fo Computational Sciences, The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine, CT, USA. Previously worked at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Center in Melbourne Australia and at the Genome Institute of Singapore.
Scientific Outreach and DEI Lead at the Discovery Partner Institute, University of Illinois Chicago
Before: Associate Research Professor (Dep. of Computer Science and Engineering and Center for Research Computing) at the University of Notre Dame, USA
Research associate in the Data-Intensive Research Group at the University of Edinburgh, UK; Research Associate in the Applied Bioinformatics Group at the University of Tübingen, Germany.
Perennial experience in industry as head of a system programmer group, project manager, system developer.
Dr. Noushin Ghaffari is a senior member of the bioinformatics team at Texas A&M AgriLife Genomics and Bioinformatics (TxGen), where she is involved in various projects from planning experiments to data analysis. She is also focused on method development and application projects that will impact scientific community. Her research activities have encompassed various areas of computational biology and have enabled her to study and learn more about the characteristics of multiple species. Furthermore, she intensely pursues her theoretical interests focusing on applications of mathematics in solving biological problems. Dr. Ghaffari has led numerous genome and transcriptome assembly projects for novel species such as cattle tick, gene discovery research though RNA-Seq studies, studying microbiome communities via metagenomics research and etc. Dr. Ghaffari has vast teaching experiences and continues to educate Texas A&M faculty/students/researcher on high performance computing, data analysis and bioinformatics.
Dr. Faten Ghodhbane-Gtari is Associate Professor at the Higher Institute of Biotechnology of Sidi Thabet, University of Manouba, Tunisia.
She has significantly advanced the field of microbiology over the past 10 years, with a particular emphasis on nitrogen-fixing actinobacteria and their ecological importance.
Dr. Gillespie is an evolutionary biologist with broad interests in organismal and molecular evolution. The major focus of his current research is deciphering the mechanisms by which obligate intracellular species of Rickettsiales (Alphaproteobacteria) invade, survive and replicate within eukaryotic cells.
In research funded by the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Gillespie utilizes phylogenetics, comparative genomics and bioinformatics to guide experimental research on various pathogenic species of Rickettsia and their associated arthropod vectors. His early research resulted in the reclassification of Rickettsia species and the identification of many lineage-specific pathogenicity factors. Through years of intense scrutinization of dozens of diverse rickettsial genomes, Dr. Gillespie and colleagues have described a large, dynamic mobilome for Rickettsia species, resulting in the identification of integrative conjugative elements as the vehicles for seeding Rickettsia genomes with many of the factors underlying obligate intracellular biology and pathogenesis. Via an iterative process of genome sequencing, phylogenomics, bioinformatics, and classical molecular biology and microbiology, Dr. Gillespie continues to lead and assist research projects on the characterization of rickettsial gene and protein function, as well as the description of cell envelope glycoconjugates.
My research focuses on investigating the patterns of gene flow in pathogen populations, focusing in phylogenetics and phylogeography as tools to recreate and understand the determinants of viral outbreaks and how this information can be translated into public policy recommendations. More specifically, my research focuses on recent arboviral outbreaks in Latin America (Zika, Chikungunya, Dengue and Yellow fever viruses and more recently SARS-CoV-2 in Brazil, Italy and South Africa), combining genetic, spatial and ecological information. I am interested in the epidemiology and ecology of viruses in natural populations. My research involves developing and applying techniques to integrate virus genetic data with traditional clinical and demographic data.