Virtual meeting, free registration

Details below.

Sean
-- 
Sean Davis, MD, PhD
Center for Cancer Research
National Cancer Institute
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, MD 20892
https://seandavi.github.io/
https://twitter.com/seandavis12



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https://biocasia2020.bioconductor.org/

When: Oct 15 - 18, 2020
What: Main Conference
Where: Virtual Conference
Slack: Bioconductor Team (#biocasia2020 channel)
Twitter: #BioCAsia2020

BioC Asia 2020 is proceeding as a Virtual Conference. BioC Asia 2020
highlights current developments within and beyond the Bioconductor project,
with a focus on developments from people in the Asia-Pacific region.
Interactive sessions will be held 0830 - 1700 Beijing Time / China Standard
Time (UTC + 8).

Registration for BioC Asia 2020 is free and available through our event
page.

The call for abstracts is open.

Conference highlights
Keynotes and contributed talks with live Q&A sessions
Live tweets of the conference will be posted on Twitter using #BioCAsia2020
hashtag
Join Bioc conversations on Slack https://bioc-community.herokuapp.com/
Follow @Bioconductor on Twitter https://twitter.com/Bioconductor
For Bioconductor support, use https://support.bioconductor.org/
Bioconductor website https://www.bioconductor.org/
Key dates for virtual BioC Asia 2020
Sep 3: Registration Opens
Sep 3: Call for abstracts for talks
Sep 25: Deadline for proposals for talks
Oct 15-18: BioC Asia 2020 Virtual Meeting


Keynote Speakers


Robert Gentleman, Harvard Center for Computational Biomedicine
Robert Gentleman is currently the founding executive director of the
Harvard Center for Computational Biomedicine. Prior to that, he has held
important positions in 23andMe, Genentech, Fred Hutch Cancer Institute, and
Dana Farber Cancer Institute at Harvard. He is recognized as one of the
originators of the R programming language. He has also co-founded the
Bioconductor project, which aims to promote the development of open-source
tools for bioinformatics and computational biology.



Yi Xing, Center for Computational and Genomic Medicine, Children’s Hospital
of Philadelphia
Dr. Yi Xing is the Francis West Lewis Endowed Chair and Founding Director
of the Center for Computational and Genomic Medicine at the Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), and Professor of Pathology and Laboratory
Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (Penn). Dr. Xing has an
extensive publication record in bioinformatics, genomics, and RNA biology.
His work has provided fundamental insights into the function, regulation,
and evolution of post-transcriptional RNA processing in mammals. His
current research merges the fields of computational biology, biomedical
data science, RNA genomics, human genetics, precision medicine, and
immuno-oncology.



Xuegong Zhang, Tsinghua University, China
Dr. Zhang is a Professor and Director of Bioinformatics Division, Tsinghua
National Laboratory of Information Science and Technology (TNLIST). The
main research directions are pattern recognition, bioinformatics, and
systems biology. Great achievements have been made in high-throughput omics
data processing and analysis methods, RNA sequencing and alternative
splicing regulation, metagenomic analysis, biological big data machine
learning, and precision medicine applications.

Invited Speakers


Lihua Julie Zhu, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Lihua Julie Zhu is currently a professor and the head of Bioinformatics
Core in the Department of Molecular, Cell and Cancer Biology (MCCB) of
University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS). Her group has developed
a dozen Bioconductor packages with various utilities including peak
annotation (ChIPpeakAnno), motif analysis and visualization (motifStack and
dagLogo), ATAC-seq data evaluation (ATACseqQC), polyadenylation site
identification (cleanUpdTSeq and InPAS), multi-omics data integration and
visualization (trackViewer and geneNetworkBuilder), nucleolar-associated
domain finder (NADfinder), and gRNA design and evaluation (CRISPRseek and
GUIDEseq) for the CRISPR genome editing system.



Kai Ye, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China
Dr. Ye is a Professor at Xi’an Jiaotong University. The current research
fields are large data mining, pattern recognition, computer algorithms,
machine learning, bioinformatics, and genomic variation. Previously, Dr. Ye
was appointed as an assistant professor at Leiden University Medical Center
in the Netherlands and then The Genome Institute at Washington University
in St. Louis in the United States. He has developed a series of genomic
mutation detection methods such as Pindel and MSIsensor. He was an invited
member of the 1000 Genomes Project and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Five
representative papers in the past five years have been published in
Science, Nature Medicine, Nature Communications, Genome Research, and GPB.



Qiangfeng Zhang, Tsinghua University, China
Dr. Zhang is a Professor in MOE Key Laboratory of Bioinformatics, Tsinghua
University. His recent research interests are the application of the
structural systems biology methods to study the mechanism and effective
prediction of protein-RNA interaction, the structure, function, and
evolution of non-coding RNA, and human diseases, especially the molecular
mechanism and effective treatment methods in cancer and infectious diseases
caused by RNA viruses. His research achievement in structural systems
biology has been published in many high-impact journals such as Nature and
PNAS.



Tingting Li, Peking University, China
Dr. Li is an Associate Professor in the Department of Medical Informatics,
Peking University School of Basic Medical Sciences. She is focusing on the
bioinformatics research work of protein post-translational modification
regulatory network and comprehensive mining of multi-omics data, using
information and systems perspectives and methods to study basic issues in
life sciences. A total of 33 SCI papers have been published in the field of
bioinformatics, of which 21 SCI-listed papers have been published in
journals such as Nucleic Acids Research, Mol Cell Proteomics, Briefings in
Bioinformatics, EBioMedicine, etc. as correspondence or first author
(including joint).



Lin Hou, Tsinghua University, China
Dr. Hou is an Associate Professor in the Center for Statistical Science,
Tsinghua University. She is specialized in statistics and its application
in biological big data and precision medicine, including statistical
genetics, whole-genome association analysis, modeling and analysis of
next-generation sequencing data, cancer genomics, large-scale biological
interaction networks, and multi-omics data integration, etc.



Guangchuang Yu, Southern Medical University, China
Guangchuang Yu is a Professor and associate director in the Department of
Bioinformatics, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Southern Medical
University. His group is committed to developing bioinformatics tools for
the analysis and visualization of biological data. He has developed several
Bioconductor packages including enrichment analysis and visualization
(clusterProfiler and enrichplot), semantic similarity measurement (GOSemSim
and DOSE), peak annotation and comparison (ChIPseeker), phylogenetic data
integration and visualization (treeio, ggtree and ggtreeExtra), and
microbial biomarker discovery (MicrobiotaProcess). He has published many
highly cited research papers in journals such as Molecular Biology and
Evolution, Methods in Ecology and Evolution, and Bioinformatics.



Charity Law, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Australia
Charity Law is a statistical bioinformatician whose work focuses
predominantly on gene expression analyses of high-throughput data. The
impact of her work is best illustrated by the popularity of limma-voom, a
method for RNA-seq gene expression analysis that she developed. She
currently holds the position of senior research officer in the Epigenetics
and Development Division at Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical
Research, Australia. In addition to differential gene expression, her
research interests include differential isoform usage and transcript
expression analyses, as well as exploration into methods for long-read
RNA-seq and single-cell RNA-seq data.



Koki Tsuyuzaki, RIKEN BDR BiT, Japan
Koki Tsuyuzaki is a post-doc researcher at RIKEN BDR BiT and also a
researcher at JST PRESTO. He is one of the active Bioconductor committers
and has developed hundreds of R/Bioconductor packages including metaSeq,
MeSH.db, MeSH.AOR.db, MeSH.PCR.db, MeSH.XXX.eg.db, MeSHDbi,
LRBase.XXX.eg.db, LRBaseDbi, scTensor, and scTGIF. He will talk about the
data integration approach based on tensor decomposition and the
applications to single-cell omics.



Saskia Freytag, Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research, Australia
Saskia Freytag is currently a post-doctoral researcher focusing on single
cell omics at the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research. She is the
developer and maintainer of several Bioconductor packages and interactive
applications. For several years, she was one of the co-organizer of
R-Ladies Melbourne, a diversity initiative aiming to promote gender
diversity in the R community. She is also the co-host of a podcast about
the R language.

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