Research Overview |
The research program in the Computational Biology Branch is carried out by Senior Investigators, tenure track Investigators, Staff Scientists, Postdoctoral Fellows, and students. The program focuses on theoretical, analytical and applied approaches to a broad range of fundamental problems in molecular biology.
The expertise of the group is concentrated in sequence analysis,
protein structure/function analysis, and gene identification, yet research
interests cover a wide range of topics in computational biology and information science.
Briefly, these include but are not limited to: database searching algorithms,
low-complexity sequences, sequence signals, mathematical models of evolution,
statistical methods in virology, dynamic behavior of chemical reaction systems,
statistical text-retrieval algorithms, protein structure and function prediction,
comparative genomics, taxonomic trees, and population genetics.
Many of the basic research projects conducted by CBB investigators serve to
enhance and strengthen NCBI’s suite of publicly available databases and
software application tools. Collaborative research efforts, among NCBI
investigators as well as with the external research community, have led
to the development of innovative algorithms (BLAST, PSI-BLAST, SEG,
VAST, and COGs) and novel research approaches (text neighboring) that
have transformed the field of computational biology. Algorithms and
applications currently under development have the potential to further
advance scientific discovery.
Members of the CBB contribute significantly to the validity and
reliability of NCBI’s online resources by reviewing the quality and
accuracy of the data deposited in the databases, as well as the
accuracy of the information used to annotate the data. Members
also provide leadership and guidance to the extramural community
by planning and organizing scientific consortia to determine the
most effective use of public sequence resources for large-scale or
high-throughput experimental biology. Researchers collaborate to
define known research gaps and to identify mechanisms to bridge
these gaps.
Address |
Computational Biology Branch
NCBI, NLM, NIH
8600 Rockville Pike MSC 6075
Building 38A, Room 6N601
Bethesda, MD 20894-6075
U.S.A.
Phone: 301-496-2475
Revised: September 29, 2008.
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