April 26, 2008
Microsoft Research announced it will support a number of
genome-related research projects as part of its Computational Challenges of
Genome Wide Association Studies (GWAS) program. Funding places emphasis on data
access and visualitzation tools for scientists working to map the human genome.
Among the supported work: Purdue University researches gained support for an
effort to build an Interactive Software System for Integrating Clinical
Genotyping With Prescription Drug Safety Assurance.
Also, the Translational Genomics Research Institute, will work on combining data
generated in genome research via a universal data format that would accommodate
multiple vendor platforms into a single file and software library. Johns Hopkins
Hospital will work the genes responsible for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)
by studying 489 Finnish ALS cases.
University of California, San Diego; Division of Computer Science, and the
University of California, Berkeley; will look into “Pathway-Based Association:
for genome studies. They will look to explain the associations captured by GWAS
in terms of known gene and protein interactions by developing computational
tools that help explain linkages between signaling, regulatory and metabolic
pathways to the genes that are associated with a disorder.
Among other work supported by Microsoft, the University of the Republic of
Uruguay; Pasteur Institute at Montevideo will work to define biologiy-oriented
data-quality properties.
“Many books today suggest that the mass of women lead lives of noisy desperation.” Peter S. Prescott
MGM
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