Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing

Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing

The Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing (PSB) is a scientific meeting held annually since 1996. The conference is unusual in that its sessions are determined annually on the basis of proposals submitted by interested scientists, with the goal of presenting research only on cutting-edge topics. The conference proceedings are published by World Scientific Publishing, and also are freely available in electronic format through PubMed and through the conference web site.

Size and venue

Attendance at PSB is capped at 375 people. The venue rotates between the Hawai'ian islands, staying at a given hotel for two consecutive years and then moving to a new island.

Ethics talks

Like most scientific meetings, PSB includes keynote speakers; an unusual feature of PSB is that it always includes a keynote speech on ethics. Ethics keynote speech presenters in previous years have included:

* 1996: Eric M. Meslin, "The moral status of U.S. science and science policy: lessons from the stem cell research wars"
* 1994: Henry T. Greely, "Social constraints on acquiring and using human biodata: is privacy dead?"
* 1993: Latanya Sweeney, "Privacy, HIPAA and the future of genomic research: can technology help?"

Influential papers

Influential papers from PSB have included the following:

* Fukuda et al. (1998) [http://psb.stanford.edu/psb-online/proceedings/psb98/fukuda.pdf Toward information extraction: identifying protein names from biological papers] was for several years one of the most-cited papers in the field of BioNLP.
* A series of papers presented at PSB were influential in popularizing the ontology mapping, alignment, and linking tasks in molecular biology.
* Schwartz and Hearst (1993) [http://psb.stanford.edu/psb-online/proceedings/psb03/schwartz.pdf A simple algorithm for identifying abbreviation definitions in biomedical text] describes an algorithm that has become a widely used component of BioNLP systems.

See also

* Bioinformatics

External links

* [http://psb.stanford.edu The PSB web site]

References

* Hunter, Lawrence; and T.E.D. Klein (editors) (1996) Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing '96 World Scientific Publishing Co. ISBN-10: 9810225784 ISBN-13: 978-9810225780


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • List of computer science conferences — This is a list of academic conferences in computer science. Most of these academic conferences are annual or bi annual events.The order with which the conferences are listed in their respective fields corresponds to a rough and non authoritative… …   Wikipedia

  • Relationship extraction — is the task of extracting named relationships between entities in text. Semantic role labelling [ [http://www.lsi.upc.es/ srlconll/ CoNLL 2005 Shared Task: Semantic Role Labeling ] ] is a closely related task. Extracted relationships between… …   Wikipedia

  • Computational biology — involves the development and application of data analytical and theoretical methods, mathematical modeling and computational simulation techniques to the study of biological, behavioral, and social systems.[1] The field is widely defined and… …   Wikipedia

  • Pi-calculus — In theoretical computer science, the pi calculus is a process calculus originally developed by Robin Milner, Joachim Parrow and David Walker as a continuation of work on the process calculus CCS (Calculus of Communicating Systems). The aim of the …   Wikipedia

  • Sequence motif — In genetics, a sequence motif is a nucleotide or amino acid sequence pattern that is widespread and has, or is conjectured to have, a biological significance. For proteins, a sequence motif is distinguished from a structural motif, a motif formed …   Wikipedia

  • PSB — can stand for:* Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing * Partido Socialista Brasileiro * Pearl S. Buck, the Nobel Laureate * Penn, Schoen Berland, a market research firm * Pet Shop Boys * The PhotoShop Big (.PSB) file format from Adobe PhotoShop… …   Wikipedia

  • Biomedical text mining — (also known as BioNLP) refers to text mining applied to texts and literature of the biomedical and molecular biology domain. Itis a rather recent research field on the edge of natural language processing, bioinformatics, medical informatics and… …   Wikipedia

  • GeneRIF — A GeneRIF or Gene Reference Into Function is a short (255 characters or less) statement about the function of a gene. GeneRIFs provide a simple mechanism for allowing scientists to add to the functional annotation of genes described in the… …   Wikipedia

  • Semantic integration — is the process of interrelating information from diverse sources, for example calendars and to do lists; email archives; physical, psychological, and social presence information; documents of all sorts; contacts (including social graphs); search… …   Wikipedia

  • Tree rearrangement — Tree rearrangements are used in heuristic algorithms devoted to searching for an optimal tree structure. They can be applied to any set of data that are naturally arranged into a tree, but have most applications in computational phylogenetics,… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”