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July 13: ISMB Day 2 Highlights and Recap

Prior to the day’s keynote address, Day 2 of ISMB 2024 started off with a celebration of the ISCB 2024 Class of Fellows and presentation of the Fellows Awards to those that were in attendance, as well as the award presentation to Dr. Scott Markel, the recipient of the Outstanding Contributions to ISCB Award!

After the morning celebration and keynote talk, the remaining highlights for the day included the first day of the poster session, 8 COSI tracks, the NIH/ODSS special session, and Technology Track presentations.

 

Keynote Address

With her talk, “New Methods for Very Large-Scale Tree Estimation,” Dr. Tandy Warnow, the ISCB Accomplishments by a Senior Scientist Award keynote speaker, kicked off day two of the ISMB 2024 conference!

Dr. Warnow explored the complexities and advancements in phylogenomics, particularly focusing on the estimation of large-scale phylogenies and their applications to basic science questions, such as understanding the evolution of life on Earth. She highlighted the computational and statistical challenges posed by large datasets, including issues related to missing data, heterogeneity, and the sheer number of loci and species involved. Estimating these phylogenies, which can have potentially millions of leaves, requires sophisticated approaches due to the statistical and computational difficulties involved.

In response to the challenges posed by the phylogenetic estimations, Dr. Warnow emphasized the utility of divide-and-conquer approaches, such as supertrees and disjoint tree mergers (DTMs), to manage the challenges effectively, explaining that methods like Markov models and maximum likelihood tree estimation can help researchers infer phylogenies with improved statistical consistency and sample complexity. However, she noted that scalability and accuracy remain significant challenges, particularly for large datasets.

There is a need for new methods to handle discordance in species trees due to biological factors like gene duplication, loss, and incomplete lineage sorting. Dr. Warnow also addressed the importance of post-tree analyses, including rooting gene and species trees, estimating branch lengths, and dating internal nodes, which are essential for downstream analyses.

Finally, Dr. Warnow underscored ongoing efforts to develop better divide-and-conquer strategies, scalable supertree methods, and improved theoretical frameworks to enhance the accuracy and feasibility of large-scale phylogenetic analyses, inviting further research and innovation in this evolving field.

 

Session Recaps

Education

The Education COSI covered an exciting collection of contributed talks, proceedings talks, and keynotes.  The session opened with our first keynote speaker, Rolanda Julius, speaking about advances in data science training and health innovations in Africa.  Contributed talks spoke about familiar areas to the community, such as use of competency frameworks through talks by Marta Lloret Llinares, Nilson Coimbra, and Dusanka Nikolic.  New directions and case studies in bioinformatics education were presented in further contributed talks by Sara Fumagalli, Nia Hughes, and Ana Swan, and Priyanka Surana.  Michelle Brazas and Russell Schwartz gave a quick summary of many directions for the community covered at the most recent Bioinformatics Education Summit, an annual international meeting of the community held this past May in New York.   And our program for the first time featured two proceedings talks, by Pavlin Polikar and Selly Selem-Mojica.  Closing out the session was our second keynote, by Francis Ouellette, to provide a perspective on education and training efforts of our local hosts, Bioinformatics.ca, over the past 25 years. These and other topics will see further follow-up in through education posters and the Workshop on Education in Bioinformatics (WEB).

HiTSeq

HitSeq COSI was pleased to present today a total of 2 keynote speakers, 8 oral presentation from PhD students, postoc and principal investigators and a Invited presentation from PacBio, the sponsor for HitSeq this year.

  • The track debuted with keynote speaker Dr. Sushmita Roy, where she discussed how changes in 3D genome organization can lead to transcriptional changes and unsupervised learning methods for regulatory genomics.  

  • Talks from students comprised of presentations of tools and predictive models  to improve splicing status of scRNAseq reads, single-cell and spatial clustering, classification of nanopore singal and structural variant discovery.

  • HitSeq was also pleased to hear from PacBio (sponsor) representant, Dr. Liz Tsent where she discussed how novel data requires new tools for analysis and diverse sequencing platforms such as isoform characterization, variant detection, phasing, and quantification. She recommend to read PacBio preprint Vollger et al. bioRxiv(2023) which delves into PaciBio efforts to analyze the multiome: genome + methylome + epigenome + transcriptome.

  • Finally, the amazing HitSeq day ended with the second keynote speaker of the day Dr. Evan Eichler, a fascinating talk about the importance of understanding the complexity of human genomes and how HiFi Pac Bio sequencing and Ultra Reads ONT have enabled us to understand human complexity and variation. He also discussed how pangenomes robustly represent human complexity. One pangenome can provide better resolution than 7 linear references.

No wonder why the audience was so engaged and having a lot of questions!

 

iRNA

The iRNA COSI started off with a keynote by Julia Salzman who presented SPLASH, a new statistics-first analytic approach which represents a paradigm shift in the analysis of sequencing datasets. We then had many talks discussing sequencing biases, new methods and approaches enabling a better resolution of the transcriptome/epitranscriptome and their application to specific contexts resulting in an increased understanding of the transcriptome, its regulation and its output. Our lively lunchtime poster session was advertised by nice concise, dynamic and original flash talks. Our last talk of the day was a keynote by Ashley Laughney who described tools to map genotypes to complex cellular and in vivo functions at scale and approaches that investigate the startling findings that activation of a given protein or signaling pathway can lead to very diverse functional outputs depending on the context.

 

🎉Youth Bioinformatics Symposium Winner🎉

Congratulations to Savanna Larson from Minnetonka High School for winning the 2024 YBS Student challenge with their submission "Evaluating the effects of sympatry on Canada lynx and bobcat population dynamics in Minnesota"

 

🧭 Career Compass Featured Jobs

Researcher, University of Oklahoma

From the job description: “Whether your degree is in Biomedical Sciences, Biochemistry, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Bioinformatics, Computer Science, or Mathematics, if you are passionate about working at the intersection of biology and computation, interested in functional genomics and thrive in a highly collaborative and dynamic environment, this is the perfect PhD or PostDoc opportunity for you.”

 

Protein Engineering Data Scientist, IFF, United States California Palo Alto

From the job description: “At IFF we are looking for an experienced machine learning oriented protein engineer. As part of our team, you will identify the state-of-the-art in data-driven methods for library design, adjust them to our purposes and help implement them for direct use in business projects. . . As a Protein Engineering Data Scientist, you will help to define our design strategy and to implement it so that it seamlessly integrates with our high-throughput screening workflows.”

 

PhD in Bioinformatics in Tropical Australia, James Cook University

From the job descrption: “Successful PhD candidate will work with leading immunologists and bioinformaticians across Australia in networks including the Centre for Personalised Immunology (www.cpi.org.au) and CIRCA (www.garvan.org.au/research/collaborative-programs/circa). This project will utilise the latest in sequencing technologies (including single cell and long reads) to discover the genetic contribution to human immunological diseases. This PhD would help develop cutting edge bioinformatics workflows and through collaborations with the Garvan Institute of Medical Research to further our understanding of the progression of autoimmune disease.”

 

Brue Mitchell fellow, Queen's University

From the job description: “We invite you to join our laboratory affiliated with Queen’s University, School of Medicine, and School of Computing. This prestigious Bruce Mitchell PhD fellowship offers an opportunity to work and receive training in computational methods and data analysis for studying the epigenetic mechanisms of cancer. The fellow is expected to collaborate closely with an experimental group from the Biology Department to elucidate the mechanisms of cancer mutations in histone and chromatin remodelers.”

 

Quick Updates and Reminders

  • If you’ve been referring to the detailed schedule that’s been displayed on the screens around level 5, you’re in luck! You can now download your own version. Click here or access it from the Quick Links menus on the ISMB home page!

  • Talk and poster presenters: Please review the details found on the Presenter Information Page.

  • Having trouble accessing the virtual platform?

    • Make sure you’re logged in using the correct email address. Remember: You must use the email you registered for the conference with in order to access the virtual platform.

    • Refresh your browser! Clear your cache/cookies and try again.

    • Try a different browser.

 
 

Coming Up Tomorrow, Sunday, July 14

Abridged Agenda
 
 
 
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July 12: ISMB Day 1 Recap

Welcome back to ISMB! We hope you’re enjoying yourself so far and are looking forward to a further few days full of science!

Day 1 of the ISMB 2024 conference was jam-packed with 7 in-person tutorials, the 20th year celebration of the Student Council Symposium, and the Youth Bioinformatics Symposium!

 

Highlights of Day 1

Following a welcome from ISCB’s President Predrag Radivojac and Honorary Conference Chair Francis Ouellette, Dr. Fiona Brinkman gave a stellar opening talk to officially begin ISMB 2024!

Dr. Brinkman, a self-described nature lover and computer geek, explored how we as researchers can sustainably maintain and further develop bioinformatics and computational biology software, databases, and tools when funding support has a time limit, as well as exploring how we can promote open data and science in a way that’s sustainable and beneficial to communities.

While a main current to Brinkman’s talk was the challenges posed by the distinctly unsustainable grant-based funding model—which has the potential to limit growth in the field—there were several other important points discussed.

One such point was that interdisciplinary integration is necessary for innovation and novel discoveries! This point was exemplified by efforts to identify drug-targetable genes while preserving beneficial bacteria. Excitement over open-source data brought Brinkman’s talk to another key point: accurate, well-organized data is key to moving the field forward and has the potential to “get a lot more people’s brains working” on the big questions.

We need diversity and inclusion for greater innovation, but this requires more people, which requires more funding, which leads us back to the unsustainable grant cycle, which many researchers and labs finds themselves stuck in. Brinkman suggested the bioinformatics and computational biology community needs to advocate for public-private partnerships to ensure resource sustainability as we try to keep up with this quickly evolving field. A crucial overarching point from Brinkman was that we need sustainability with sensitivity. We need to watch out for unintended harm or loss of benefits to communities. As well, more discussion and consultation are needed to accurately address the challenges of funding and biological data sustainability, including maintaining benefits of open data, equity for marginalized/disadvantaged groups, and the need to ensure data sovereignty for groups.  

An overarching message of Dr. Brinkman’s opening keynote address at ISMB 2024 was a call for organized, careful advancement in bioinformatics, integrating open science principles with a sensitivity to community impacts and the evolving nature of bioinformatics.

 

Quick Reminders

  • Talk and poster presenters: Please review the details found on the Presenter Information Page.

  • WiFi Access: The WiFi info can be found on the back of your badge, but just in case:

    • Network: ISMB2024

    • Password: 2024ISMB

  • Having trouble accessing the virtual platform?

    • Make sure you’re logged in using the correct email address. Remember: You must use the email you registered for the conference with in order to access the virtual platform.

    • Refresh your browser! Clear your cache/cookies and try again.

    • Try a different browser.

Navigating the Virtual Platform

ISMB 2024 is powered by JUNO. While it works on all browsers, JUNO works best on a Chrome browser. To have the best experience, viewing virtually or participating onsite using the platform feature, be sure your device is operating the latest version of Chrome.

Missed a Session?

Sessions (with author permissions) have been recorded and will be part of the on-demand library. You can view the available sessions at https://iscb.junolive.co/ISMB24/On-Demand 24 hours AFTER the session has been completed. 

After the conference, we will work to edit the live session recording into individual videos. As registered participants of this event, you will have exclusive access to the conference content and will be able to log in at any time to view a recording!

 

Coming Up Tomorrow, Saturday, July 13

Abridged Agenda
 
 
 
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🔎Join us for an exclusive preview of the ISMB 2024 Virtual Poster Theater!

We're offering this complimentary glimpse into the latest research for both registrants and non-registrants. But act fast! This preview will only be available for two days: July 10th and July 11th!

 To take a peek inside the conference:

  1. Login to Nucleus (https://iscb.junolive.co)

  2. Click on the ISMB 2024 tile

  3. From the options at the top of the screen, navigate to “Virtual Poster Theater”

  4. Explore and enjoy!


If you're not an ISCB member and don't already have access to Nucleus, you can register to access the platform here:
https://iscb.swoogo.com/ISCBnucleus-registration

 
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We’re excited to remind you about the upcoming RSGDREAM 2024 conference!

The RECOMB/ISCB Conference on Regulatory & Systems Genomics with DREAM Challenges will take place from October 1–3 at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

This multidisciplinary meeting will focus on computational methods in regulatory and systems genomics, as well as related areas of systems and network biology crucial for understanding gene regulation and biological systems.

🗓️ Abstract submission deadline: August 2

This is a fantastic opportunity to showcase your research and connect with experts in the field. Don’t miss out on being part of RSGDREAM’s 16th annual meeting.

Submit your abstract soon and join us for an enriching experience!

Submit Now!
 
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The July Newsletter featuring the ISMB 2024 Conference Programme is now available for you to explore!

Peruse the digital pages for a message from the ISCB President, articles about this year’s award winners, abstracts from our Distinguished Keynotes, and to view the tutorial and session schedules that will shape this year’s event.

Plus: Be sure to check out the interactive Table of Contents!

Navigate the programme effortlessly with our new clickable Table of Contents! Simply click on any title to jump directly to the desired section in the PDF.

 

Click here or on the cover image below to access the programme!

We can’t wait for you to discover all the exciting content we have lined up for you this year!

 

🧬 See you at Montréal! 🧬

 
 
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Last call!

If you’re hoping to be part of the inaugural Asia and Pacific Bioinformatics Joint Conference, you have until

Sunday, July 7

to submit your abstract!

Submit Now!

Don’t Forget:

Early bird registration rates end July 31st.

 
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ISMB 2024 is just around the corner, and we don’t want you to miss out on talks, tutorials, and top-notch science!

 Whether you’re able to attend in person or can join us virtually, there’s still time to register!

Still haven’t decided if you should attend?

Here’s why you should be there:

  • Training workshops and tutorials: Sessions to boost your bioinformatics and computational biology expertise. (See below for a tutorial deadline reminder.)

  • Student Council Symposium: A symposium for students to showcase research and connect with peers and experts.

  • Live and on-demand sessions: Live and on-demand talks for all time zones.

  • Scientific talks and posters: 500+ scientific talks and 700+ posters on varying topics within bioinformatics and computational biology.

  • Live Q&A and chat features: Engage with speakers and participants through interactive features!

  • Research Exchange Forum: A platform for researchers to present their work, both in person and virtually.

  • Face-to-face networking events: Networking opportunities for in-person attendees.

  • Virtual attendee profile and matchmaker features: Tools for networking and forging connections in the virtual platform.

  • One-on-one meetings: Arrange private meetings with speakers, presenters, exhibitors, and sponsors to explore their work.

  • Access to the on-demand repository: Access exclusive recordings of talks and poster presentations post-conference.

Don’t wait to secure your spot at the premier event in bioinformatics and computational biology happening live in Montréal and online!

 We look forward to seeing you there! 🧬

Register Now!
 

🔔 Tutorial Registration Reminder:

The final day to register for all tutorials, both virtual and in-person, is Friday, July 5. Act fast, as many are already sold out!

Note: You must be registered for ISMB in order to attend a tutorial.

 
 
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Check out the details below to see how you can be a part of ISCB-LATAM SOiBiO CCBCOL 2024 and contribute to the field of bioinformatics!

 

Proceedings Papers

Authors are invited to submit proceedings papers to ISCB-LATAM to be included in a special issue of Bioinformatics Advances featuring peer-reviewed articles from the ISCB-LATAM conference!

Paper Submission Deadline: Thursday, July 25

 

Oral and Poster Presentations

Scientists and professionals in bioinformatics and computational biology are invited to submit their high-quality original research for presentation at ISCB-LATAM!

Your abstract should highlight a scientific result and not serve as an advertisement for any commercial software package. You can see the list of topics here.

Abstract Submission Deadline: Friday, September 6

 

Hoping for an Attendance Fellowship?

If you’re seeking an attendance fellowship, submit your abstract by Monday, August 5 for consideration!

Click the button below to find more information on proceedings papers and abstract submissions, and to submit your work to ISCB-LATAM!

Submit Now!
 
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If you want to be part of the inaugural APBJC conference, you have until Sunday, July 7 to submit your abstract.

Submit Now

🗓️Other Important Dates for APBJC 2024

 

Abstract submission

  • Acceptance notifications: by July 28th

Late breaking abstracts (Poster only)

  • Submission period: July 30th - August 7th

Registration

  • Early bird registration: May 10th - July 31st

  • Regular rate registration: starting August 1st

 
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