OSC Media Contacts |
New Bioinformatics Conference Showcases Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) Services for ResearchersAthens, Ohio – June 26, 2006 – OSC announces its active role in planning and participating in the Inaugural Ohio Collaborative Conference on Bioinformatics (OCCBIO) set for June 28-30, at Ohio University. The conference provides an interdisciplinary forum for discussing research findings and experiences in computational approaches to biology-related problems. An important conference goal is to foster long-term collaborative relationships among informatics and life sciences researchers from academia, government and industry – spanning interests across Ohio. Terry Lewis, research program coordinator at OSC and founding co-chair for OCCBIO, said he and other organizers first met in January 2005 to discuss creating a bioinformatics conference in Ohio. Three of OSC’s research staff will conduct one of the five tutorial sessions during the first day of the conference, focusing on bioinformatics resources. OSC staff members conducting the following tutorials include Kevin Wohlever, director of operations for OSC-Springfield, Introduction to Computational Resources, Yuan Zhang, systems developer/engineer at OSC-Springfield, Introduction to Bioinformatics Software, and Pete Carswell, systems developer engineer for OSC-Columbus, Introduction to Perl for Bioinformatics. As part of the OCCBIO technical program, Eric Stahlberg, OSC systems biology researcher, will jointly present on Genome-Wide Identification and Comparative Analysis of Coiled-Coil Proteins with Annkatrin Rose, postdoctoral researcher, and Iris Meier, associate professor, of The Ohio State University’s Department of Plant Cellular and Molecular Biology Center. Lewis said other OSC staff contributed significantly to the OCCBIO conference by providing website construction, print design, equipment logistics, securing sponsorships, and other activities and in-kind services. OSC’s networking division will provide live videoconferencing of OCCBIO’s keynote speeches and industry panel. These will be available to watch at OSC-Columbus, OSC-Springfield and the Nelson Commons facility at Ohio University. “This is a “proof-of-concept” activity,” Lewis said. “People can come to any of these three locations to see these parts of the conference. The important thing is that it works, it’s live, and it provides an opportunity for those who can’t attend the conference in person.” Leslie Southern, OSC high performance computing (HPC) director, said the Center has an array of computational environments that support biological research including the SGI Altix, Cray X1, Apple G5 cluster, HP Intel Itanium-2 cluster, and Intel Pentium 4 cluster, as well as nearly two dozen software applications. Eric Stahlberg, OSC biosciences researcher, indicated that OSC’s biosciences effort began in earnest in early 2001, as a result of OSC’s focused exploration on application portals for bioinformatics users. “HPC has opened the door to using bioinformatics and systems biology to explore complex relationships among data, and created the opportunity to tackle very large and involved simulations of biological systems,” Stahlberg said. “So many centers have jumped on the bandwagon because the number of opportunities for impact is nearly limitless.” OCCBIO will feature 13 technical sessions, 62 oral presentations and 50 poster presentations. More than 40 of Ohio’s academic, industrial and government organizations will participate. About OSC |
