QCBio Seminar Series: Aly Khan

Boyer Hall 159

Research Assistant Professor Principal Investigator, Laboratory for Computational Immunology Department of Pathology University of Chicago “New computational approaches to understand immune function”

QCBio Seminar Series: Linda Petzold

Boyer Hall 159

Mehrabian Distinguished Professor Computer Science University of California, Santa Barbara “Integration of Stochastic Chemical Kinetics, Mechanics and Growth in the Modeling of Cell Polarization” https://www.cs.ucsb.edu/people/faculty/petzold

QCBio Seminar Series: Zeba Wunderlich

Boyer Hall 159

Assistant Professor Department of Developmental and Cell Biology Institute for Immunology University of California, Irvine "The Connections Between Enhancer Architecture and Function" https://devcell.bio.uci.edu/faculty/zeba-wunderlich/

QCB Research Lunch – Soo Bin Kwon (Ernst Lab)

Boyer 159 611 Charles E. Young Dr. E., Los Angeles, CA, United States

"Learning a genome-wide score of evidence for conservation between human and mouse from large-scale functional genomic annotations"

QCB Research Lunch – David Pan (Pajukanta Lab)

Boyer 159 611 Charles E. Young Dr. E., Los Angeles, CA, United States

“Subcutaneous adipose transcriptomes reveal a novel master trans regulator, TBX15, controlling a co-expression network with a high polygenic risk for abdominal obesity”

QCB Research Lunch – Benjamin Chu (Sinsheimer Lab)

Boyer 159 611 Charles E. Young Dr. E., Los Angeles, CA, United States

“Iterative hard thresholding: a multiple regression approach for genome-wide association studies and high dimensional inference”

QCB Research Lunch – Alexander Brummer (Savage Lab)

Boyer 159 611 Charles E. Young Dr. E., Los Angeles, CA, United States

“Geometric characterizations of multivessel networks and single vessel shape with applications to disease diagnostics”

Zeba Wunderlich, PhD

Gonda 1357

 Assistant Professor Department of Developmental and Cell Biology University of California, Irvine  " The Connections Between Enhancer Architecture and Function"