【转帖】Pevzner教授 Do-It-Yourself 蛋白质组学课程
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Pevzner教授 Do-It-Yourself 蛋白质组学课程
Budding bioinformaticists in Pavel Pevzner's undergraduate research experiences class looked at the proteins found in a bacterium and worked backward to identify the genes that created them.
The course was not for the faint of heart. Undergraduates in the bioinformatics program at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) were used to working alongside faculty on “real” projects. But this class, the innocently-named “Research Experience for Undergraduates,” was going to be something very different.
“We told them that it wouldn't be a walk in the park,” recalls Pavel Pevzner, a HHMI professor, a professor of computer science at UCSD, and a tireless advocate for pushing undergraduates into the deep end of bioinformatics research.
“We told them it wouldn’t be the usual undergraduate research project where you are tightly guarded and you essentially work on a problem with a known solution. We told them that we were starting a new branch of bioinformatics.”
----------Pavel A. Pevzner
http://www.hhmi.org/news/20080702pevzner.html
Budding bioinformaticists in Pavel Pevzner's undergraduate research experiences class looked at the proteins found in a bacterium and worked backward to identify the genes that created them.
Budding bioinformaticists in Pavel Pevzner's undergraduate research experiences class looked at the proteins found in a bacterium and worked backward to identify the genes that created them.
The course was not for the faint of heart. Undergraduates in the bioinformatics program at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) were used to working alongside faculty on “real” projects. But this class, the innocently-named “Research Experience for Undergraduates,” was going to be something very different.
“We told them that it wouldn't be a walk in the park,” recalls Pavel Pevzner, a HHMI professor, a professor of computer science at UCSD, and a tireless advocate for pushing undergraduates into the deep end of bioinformatics research.
“We told them it wouldn’t be the usual undergraduate research project where you are tightly guarded and you essentially work on a problem with a known solution. We told them that we were starting a new branch of bioinformatics.”
----------Pavel A. Pevzner
http://www.hhmi.org/news/20080702pevzner.html
Budding bioinformaticists in Pavel Pevzner's undergraduate research experiences class looked at the proteins found in a bacterium and worked backward to identify the genes that created them.