• QCBio IN SPRING 2020

    – Collaboratory Workshops
    – Research Webinars on Tuesdays & Fridays at 12 p.m.
    – Journal Clubs
    – Multi-Group meetings:
    . Microscopy & Modeling on Wednesdays at 12 p.m.
    . Network Science Group meeting
    – Afternoon Tea Times

  • Congratulations to all NSF Graduate Fellowship awardees and Honorable Mentions in QCBio-affiliated programs!

    NSF GRFP Awardees

    Paheli Desai-Chowdhry, Savage lab
    Kevin Neumann, Pinter-Wollman Lab
    William Schmidt, Wong Lab
    Nicole Lynn, Torres Lab
    Aidan Howenstine, Sears Lab
    Elena Coley, Hsiao lab
    Emma Dawson, Teitell lab
    Irena Roy, Teitell Lab

    NSF GRFP Honorable Mentions

    Marissa Ochoa, Sack/Sork labs
    Courtney McClure, Allard Lab
    Sabeen Kazmi, Hsiao Lab
    Samantha Zink, Rodriguez Lab
    Shreya Udani, Di Carlo Lab
    Elizabeth Pumford, Kamei Lab
    Abigail Hickok, Mason lab

  • Faculty Search for a
    Developmental Systems Biologist

    Theory, Computation, Experimentation

    More Information
  • B.I.G. Summer 2019

    B.I.G. Summer students at the national Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minority Students

  • PLEASE WELCOME: ERIC DEEDS, PhD, NEW QCBIO FACULTY AND ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IN THE DEPT. OF INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY

    Eric’s research interests focus on how cell fate decisions are regulated in the dynamical and stochastic molecular networks.

  • PLEASE WELCOME: ELISA FRANCO, NEW QCBIO FACULTY AND ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IN MECHANICAL AND AEROSPACE ENGINEERING

    Elisa’s research: 1) Design and synthesis of dynamic nucleic acid systems with applications in biomaterials science and biomedicine. 2) Mathematical modeling to elucidate design principles for temporal signal processing in natural and synthetic gene networks.

  • PLEASE WELCOME: PAVAK SHAH, NEW QCBIO FACULTY AND ASSISTANT PROFESSOR, DEPARTMENT OF MOLECULAR, CELL AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY

    Pavak earned his BS and PhD in Biomedical Engineering developing low cost imaging systems for infectious disease diagnostics (2009) and microdevices and automated imaging systems for single cell analysis and sorting (2014). During his postdoc in Zhirong Bao’s lab at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, he studied neural morphogenesis and developed a real-time image analysis system for optically manipulating single cells in developing embryos and living tissues.

  • 2018 SBHD Conference

    We had a blast hosting the 11th Annual International Conference on Systems Biology of Human Disease!

    View the Gallery!
  • 2020 B.I.G. Summer

    We just wrapped up an exciting summer! 74 students in 38 labs learned the latest cutting-edge research, tools and techniques used by leading scientists to solve real-world problems! Congrats to all our students who completed the Bruins-in-Genomics Summer Program!

    Check out the Posters!
  • QCBio proud sponsor of:

    “Demystifying the Oral Qualifying Exam”
    May 1, 2019,
    Organized by the AMEBA Graduate Student Organization

  • Computational Genomics Summer Institute - CGSI

    Long Program – July 15 – August 7, 2020
    Big Bear Retreat – July 15-18, 2020
    #1 Short Program – July 20-24, 2020
    #2 Short Program – August 3-7, 2020

    Read More
  • RESEARCH, TRAINING, & EDUCATION

    Follow us on Twitter for weekly updates on quantitative and computational biosciences research, training, and education!

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  • BRUINS-IN-GENOMICS SUMMER PROGRAM

    Follow us on Twitter for weekly updates on The BIG SUMMER Program and other exciting undergraduate research opportunities!

The Institute for Quantitative and Computational Biosciences is a partnership between the UCLA College, the Health Sciences, and Engineering.  Its associated faculty span more than twelve departments, and a broad range of biological and biomedical research areas – yet, the hallmark of QCBio faculty and their laboratories is the commitment to quantitative reasoning and the development of algorithmic and computational methods.

QCBio’s mission is to support quantitative and computational biosciences research, training, and education. As new measurement capabilities and public data bases are rendering the biosciences – whether basic, translational or clinical – increasingly data-rich, the challenges and opportunities for data analysis and interpretation are a hallmark of all aspects of biosciences research. Further, vast quantities of knowledge – the result of prior research investments – should be harnessed for computer-aided data interpretation and prospective prediction. Thus QCBio addresses the opportunities and challenges of data-driven and knowledge-based computational modeling in the biosciences.

QCBio fosters research into the development of algorithms, software, statistical, mechanistic, and dynamical models, as well as intra-institutional and international collaborations. QCBio provides research training and expert collaborative support via the Collaboratory. QCBio functions as the academic home and sponsor of the inter-departmental programs in Bioinformatics, Biomedical Informatics, and Computational and Systems Biology, at the graduate and undergraduate level. QCBio organizes a major summer undergraduate research program, Bruins in Genomics, that provides substantive graduate school preparation.