National Centers for Systems Biology
Seminars
Center for Complex Biological Systems (UC Irvine)
The new Systems Biology Seminar Series will feature talks of general interest to CCBS-affiliated scientists and will be held monthly on the first Monday of the month. The seminars will contain a mix of local and outside speakers and will be fairly informal in order to encourage collaborations. CCBS Seminar Schedule
Center for Genome Dynamics (The Jackson Laboratory)
Center for Modular Biology (Harvard)
Home-and-Away: Harvard-Princeton NIGMS Centers seminar
This series aims to foster communications between two of the NIGMS Centers for Systems Biology. Each month Harvard’s FAS Center for Systems Biology, and Princeton’s own Center for Quantitative Biology will exchange a speaker who will discuss his or her research.
Bauer Forum
Bauer Forum talks are informal scientific seminars designed to foster communication and collaboration among people in the Boston area with an active interest in genomics and systems biology. The talks are held on Wednesdays at 4:00pm at the FAS Center for Systems Biology.
Center for Quantitative Biology (Princeton)
Quantitative and Computational Biology Seminars
The Lewis-Sigler Institute at Princeton University sponsors weekly seminars by outside speakers on topics in quantitative and computational biology.
Home and Away: Harvard-Princeton NIGMS Centers Seminars
This series aims to foster communications between two of the NIGMS Centers for Systems Biology. Each month Harvard’s FAS Center for Systems Biology and Princeton’s Center for Quantitative Biology exchange a speaker who will discuss his or her research.
Center for Systems & Synthetic Biology (UC San Francisco)
The Center for Systems & Synthetic Biology sponsors seminars by outside speakers on various topics in quantitative systems and synthetic biology. In the 2011 seminar series, speakers include:
- James Ferrell (Stanford University School of Medicine) – Dissecting the Mitotic Trigger
- Ira B. Schwartz (Naval Research Laboratory) - The Dynamical Geometry of Epidemic Extinction
- Galit Lahav (Harvard Medical School) – Encoding Information through Protein Dynamics
For more information on our upcoming seminars, workshops and symposia please visit the Events section of our website.
Center for Systems Biology (Institute for Systems Biology)
Weekly RIP seminars offer scientists the opportunity to present their recent unpublished results and receive feedback. Postdoctoral fellows and research scientists are especially encouraged to present their work, as it provides a useful venue for practicing public speaking.
Duke Center for Systems Biology
Weekly Seminar
The seeds of the DCSB were nurtured by regular open meetings that combine research presentations with tutorials and journal clubs. The basic character of these meetings remains the same: free and open discussions where all are invited, and so-called dumb questions are not only accepted but welcomed. These questions are critical to educating ourselves and forming crucial links between disciplines. Meetings are held weekly in Room 4233 of the DCSB space in the French Family Science Center. The meetings are at 1:30pm on Wednesday afternoons.
New Mexico Spatiotemporal Modeling Center
The STMC sponsors seminars by outside speakers on topics in quantitative and computational biology in the context of cell biology, immunology and cancer biology. Some of these speakers also travel to Los Alamos National Labs as part of the jointly sponsored q-bio seminar series. Information on recent and upcoming speakers at UNM is at: New Mexico Spatiotemporal Modeling Center Seminars.
Additional information on seminars is at CNLS q-bio Seminars.
Systems Biology Center New York (SBCNY)
Systems Biology Center New York Seminar Series
The Systems Biology Center New York sponsors seminars by outside speakers on topics in computation and systems biology. In the 2011 seminar series, recent speakers include:
- Dennis Bray PhD (University of Cambridge) – Conformational Spread: Theory and Experiment
- Jose Faraldo-Gomez PhD (Max Planck Institute of Biophysics) – Insights on the Specificity and Mechanism of ATP Synthase Membrane Rotors from Theory and Experiment
- Sinya Kuroda PhD (University of Tokyo) – Temporal Coding of ERK and AKT Pathways
For more information on our upcoming seminars, workshops and symposia please visit the Events section of our website.