5-6 December, 2019
Charles Perkins Centre, Camperdown Campus of University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
General Information
This year a large portion of the BioC Asia conference will be shared with AMSI'sBioInfoSummer.
Bioconductor Ipo
Bioconductor packages are R packages that can only be used directly from python via rpy2 or similar. If you've ever had reason to use rpy2 you'd probably realize quickly that while it works, it's no where near as easy as doing the same thing directly in R. Martin leads the core team that maintains the Bioconductor project. He is the author of many Bioconductor packages and a renowned biostatistican. Elana Fertig: Elana is an Associate Professor of Oncology at Johns Hopkins University. Prior to entering the field of computational cancer biology, Elana was a NASA research fellow in numerical. Dec 21, 2020 BioConductor is a Circulatory System Cyberware in Cyberpunk 2077.Cyberwares are implants that players can install, exchange, and upgrade into V's body to obtain passive buffs and various active effects that provide different combat tactics and many more. About Bioconductor. Bioconductor provides tools for the analysis and comprehension of high-throughput genomic data.Bioconductor uses the R statistical programming language, and is open source and open development. It has two releases each year, and an active user community. Bioconductor is also available as an AMI (Amazon Machine Image) and Docker images. Learn to use tools from the Bioconductor project to perform analysis of genomic data. This is the fifth course in the Genomic Big Data Specialization from Johns Hopkins University.
Note that the annual ABACBS conference,this year joined with GIW, will be held the following week (9-11 of December) in Sydney.
Registration
Registration for BioC Asia is $60 for both days for students and $120 for anyone else.
Note that registration has closed.
Location
The conference will be held at the Charles Perkins Centre:
John Hopkins Drive, The University of Sydney,Sydney, NSW 2006
Code of Conduct
Please be aware that during this event you are expected to follow the University of Sydney's code of conduct.**In particular, the BioC Asia conference aims to provide a supportive, collegial, and harassment-free environment. **
If someone makes you or anyone else feel unsafe or unwelcome, please report it as soon as possible. Harassment and other code of conduct violations reduce the value of our event for everyone. We want you to be happy at our event. People like you make our event a better place.
You can make a report either personally or anonymously. You can make an anonymous or non-anonymous report here: https://biocasia.wufoo.com/forms/z1ghma0t1gx3tja/. It is a free-form text box that will be forwarded to conference organizers.
We can't follow up an anonymous report with you directly, but we will fully investigate it and take whatever action is necessary to prevent a recurrence.
You can make a personal report with any of the members of the conference committee: Peter Hickey, Saskia Freytag, Dario Strbenac and Stephen Pederson.
When taking a personal report, our staff will ensure you are safe and cannot be overheard. They may involve other event staff to ensure your report is managed properly. Once safe, we'll ask you to tell us about what happened. This can be upsetting, but we'll handle it as respectfully as possible, and you can bring someone to support you. You won't be asked to confront anyone and we won't tell anyone who you are.
Our team will be happy to help you! We value your attendance.
Keynote Speakers
We are pleased to annouce three international keynote speakers:
Helena Crowell: Helena earned her undergraduate degree at the Univeristy of Heidelberg in Biochemistry. She then went on to earn her Master's degree in Computational Biology & Bioinformatics at the ETH Zurich. She is currently a PhD candidate in Statistical Bioinformatics at the University ofZurich.
Helena focuses on developing analysis frameworks for CyTOF data and differential discovery in scRNA-seq data. She is the author of a popular Bioconductor package providing tools for preprocessing and analysis of cytometry data.
Martin Morgan: Martin earned his undergraduate and Master's degrees in Botany at the University of Toronto. Martin's PhD studies at the University of Chicago involved the evolutionary consequences of frequency-dependent selection, and of multilocus deleterious mutation. Martin is currently at the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo.
Martin leads the core team that maintains the Bioconductor project. He is the author of many Bioconductor packages and a renowned biostatistican.
Elana Fertig: Elana is an Associate Professor of Oncology at Johns Hopkins University. Prior to entering the field of computational cancer biology, Elana was a NASA research fellow in numerical weather prediction.
Elana runs a hybrid computational and experimental lab in the systems biology of cancer and therapeutic response. Her computational methods blend mathematical modeling and artificial intelligence to determine the biomarkers and molecular mechanisms of therapeutic resistance from multi-platform genomics data.
Invited Speakers
Joshua Ho, The University of Hong Kong
John Marioni, The University of Cambridge
Shila Ghazanfar, The University of Cambridge
Presentations
The conference will feature selected talks (15mins), lightning talks (5mins), and software demos (5mins).
Abstract submission has closed.
Workshops
There will be 9 workshops to be held on Thursdayand Friday. Participants can elect to attend 3.
Abstract submission has closed.
All workshops are open to BioInfoSummer participants. For the workshops please note that:
Bioclite
- All participants are expected to bring their own laptops
- All participants are expected to have followed the installation instructions (please check the materials for the workshops)
- WiFi access will be through either eduroam or using a login
- Access to power sockets will be available so please bring your power adapter
- Please ensure you are running a current browser (i.e. chrome, firefox etc)
To connect to a VM for BiocAsia 2019, please follow these instructions
If your VM doesn't start, the following code should work:
Contents of the VM data folder can be downloaded from here
Travel Awards
There will be a number of travel awards available, with priority given to support students and early career researchers.You must submit an abstract for a talk, software demo, or workshop to be eligible for a travel award.
Your WAN IP Information. IP Address: 207.46.13.86. Host: msnbot-207-46-13-86.search.msn.com. Welcome to IPmotivation! Free Tools for WAN IP Address properties and Reverse DNS Lookup. Copyright (c) 2011-2013 Keith Ness & Associates. A public or WAN (wide area network) IP is an address which can be routed over the internet. In IPv4, it will start by any number other than 192, 10, 172, 1 or 255. This, or any other website that you access via your web browser, or even your mail server, have a public IP that you don't really see when you call it, because you prefer to call hostnames for reasons of clarity. Your WAN IP is also known as your Public IP. We show that on our homepage. The WAN/Public IP will most likely stay the same for all devices connected to the same network. However, if a device connects to a. Your Wan IP address is: 2. What is my wan ip address.
Travel award applications have closed.
John Hopkins Drive, The University of Sydney,Sydney, NSW 2006
Code of Conduct
Please be aware that during this event you are expected to follow the University of Sydney's code of conduct.**In particular, the BioC Asia conference aims to provide a supportive, collegial, and harassment-free environment. **
If someone makes you or anyone else feel unsafe or unwelcome, please report it as soon as possible. Harassment and other code of conduct violations reduce the value of our event for everyone. We want you to be happy at our event. People like you make our event a better place.
You can make a report either personally or anonymously. You can make an anonymous or non-anonymous report here: https://biocasia.wufoo.com/forms/z1ghma0t1gx3tja/. It is a free-form text box that will be forwarded to conference organizers.
We can't follow up an anonymous report with you directly, but we will fully investigate it and take whatever action is necessary to prevent a recurrence.
You can make a personal report with any of the members of the conference committee: Peter Hickey, Saskia Freytag, Dario Strbenac and Stephen Pederson.
When taking a personal report, our staff will ensure you are safe and cannot be overheard. They may involve other event staff to ensure your report is managed properly. Once safe, we'll ask you to tell us about what happened. This can be upsetting, but we'll handle it as respectfully as possible, and you can bring someone to support you. You won't be asked to confront anyone and we won't tell anyone who you are.
Our team will be happy to help you! We value your attendance.
Keynote Speakers
We are pleased to annouce three international keynote speakers:
Helena Crowell: Helena earned her undergraduate degree at the Univeristy of Heidelberg in Biochemistry. She then went on to earn her Master's degree in Computational Biology & Bioinformatics at the ETH Zurich. She is currently a PhD candidate in Statistical Bioinformatics at the University ofZurich.
Helena focuses on developing analysis frameworks for CyTOF data and differential discovery in scRNA-seq data. She is the author of a popular Bioconductor package providing tools for preprocessing and analysis of cytometry data.
Martin Morgan: Martin earned his undergraduate and Master's degrees in Botany at the University of Toronto. Martin's PhD studies at the University of Chicago involved the evolutionary consequences of frequency-dependent selection, and of multilocus deleterious mutation. Martin is currently at the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo.
Martin leads the core team that maintains the Bioconductor project. He is the author of many Bioconductor packages and a renowned biostatistican.
Elana Fertig: Elana is an Associate Professor of Oncology at Johns Hopkins University. Prior to entering the field of computational cancer biology, Elana was a NASA research fellow in numerical weather prediction.
Elana runs a hybrid computational and experimental lab in the systems biology of cancer and therapeutic response. Her computational methods blend mathematical modeling and artificial intelligence to determine the biomarkers and molecular mechanisms of therapeutic resistance from multi-platform genomics data.
Invited Speakers
Joshua Ho, The University of Hong Kong
John Marioni, The University of Cambridge
Shila Ghazanfar, The University of Cambridge
Presentations
The conference will feature selected talks (15mins), lightning talks (5mins), and software demos (5mins).
Abstract submission has closed.
Workshops
There will be 9 workshops to be held on Thursdayand Friday. Participants can elect to attend 3.
Abstract submission has closed.
All workshops are open to BioInfoSummer participants. For the workshops please note that:
Bioclite
- All participants are expected to bring their own laptops
- All participants are expected to have followed the installation instructions (please check the materials for the workshops)
- WiFi access will be through either eduroam or using a login
- Access to power sockets will be available so please bring your power adapter
- Please ensure you are running a current browser (i.e. chrome, firefox etc)
To connect to a VM for BiocAsia 2019, please follow these instructions
If your VM doesn't start, the following code should work:
Contents of the VM data folder can be downloaded from here
Travel Awards
There will be a number of travel awards available, with priority given to support students and early career researchers.You must submit an abstract for a talk, software demo, or workshop to be eligible for a travel award.
Your WAN IP Information. IP Address: 207.46.13.86. Host: msnbot-207-46-13-86.search.msn.com. Welcome to IPmotivation! Free Tools for WAN IP Address properties and Reverse DNS Lookup. Copyright (c) 2011-2013 Keith Ness & Associates. A public or WAN (wide area network) IP is an address which can be routed over the internet. In IPv4, it will start by any number other than 192, 10, 172, 1 or 255. This, or any other website that you access via your web browser, or even your mail server, have a public IP that you don't really see when you call it, because you prefer to call hostnames for reasons of clarity. Your WAN IP is also known as your Public IP. We show that on our homepage. The WAN/Public IP will most likely stay the same for all devices connected to the same network. However, if a device connects to a. Your Wan IP address is: 2. What is my wan ip address.
Travel award applications have closed.
Thursday: 5 December, 2019
Bioconductor Workshops are in Seminar Room 1.1
Provisional Timetable
Time | |
---|---|
8:45am - 9:00am | Registration |
9:00am - 9:30am | Orientation and project updates Martin Morgan |
Session 1 | Chair: Paul Harrison |
9:30am - 10:00am | Investigating higher order interactions in single cell data with scHOT Shila Ghazanfar - invited talk |
10:00am - 10:15am | Integration of multiple single-cell CyTOF datasets to untangle the heterogeneity of cancer patients' responses to a new class of anti-cancer drugs Marie Trussart |
10:15am - 10:20am | A gene orientated approach to analysis of Hi-C data from immune cells Hannah Coughlan |
10:20am - 10:25am | A workshop on single-cell RNA-seq analysis PuXue Qiao |
10:25am - 10:30am | Seamless visualization of complex genomic variations in GMOs and edited cell lines using gmoviz Kathleen Zeglinski |
10:30am - 11:00am | Morning Tea (Provided) |
Session 2 | Chair: Alexandra Garnham |
11:00am - 11:15am | Use R/Bioconductor for Nanopore RNA-seq data analysis Xueyi Dong |
11:15am - 11:30am | topconfects: rank differentially expressed genes using confidence bounds on fold change, with multiple testing adjustment Paul Harrison |
11:30am - 11:35am | Network-based Classification with ClassifyR Dario Strbenac |
11:35am - 11:40am | Modelling for heteroscedastic groups in RNA-seq data Charity Law |
11:40 - 11:45am | Buffer time |
11:45am - 12:15pm | Visualisation and analysis of circular RNAs using Ularcirc Joshua Ho - invited speaker |
12:15pm - 1:30pm | Lunch |
1:30pm - 3:00pm | Bioinformatics Workshop Stream A: Pei Wang - Imputation and data quality control for proteomics data (description, materials) Bioinformatics Workshop Stream B: Pengyi Yang - Computational analysis for biological discovery from (phospho)proteomic data (description, materials) Bioconductor Workshop Stream C: Martin Morgan - R and Bioconductor for Genomic Analysis (description, materials) |
3:00pm - 3:30pm | Afternoon Tea (Provided) |
3:30pm - 4:30pm | Bioinformatics Workshop Stream A: Pei Wang - Imputation and data quality control for proteomics data (description, materials) Bioinformatics Workshop Stream B: Ben Crossett, David Maltby & Angela Connolly - Introduction to proteomics (description, materials) Bioconductor Workshop Stream C: Peter Hickey & Saskia Freytag - Building a Bioconductor package (description, materials) |
Session 3 | Chair: Dave Tang |
4:30pm - 4:45pm | Gene Set Testing for Differentially Methylated Regions Jovana Maksimovic |
4:45pm - 4:50pm | A tidy wrapper suite that introduces a unifying grammar for single-cell and bulk transcriptomic analyses Stefano Mangiola |
4:50pm - 4:55pm | An Introduction to currently available scATAC-seq data analysing tools Haoyu Yang |
5:00pm - 6:00pm | Bioinfosummer Poster Session |
6:00pm - 7:30pm | Public Lecture: The bright future of applied statistics Rafael Irizarry |
7:30pm - 9:00pm | Pub |
Friday: 6 December, 2019
Morning presentations are in The Hub, outside of Charles Perkins Centre main entry. Afternoon workshops in Dry Lab 1.1, Dry Lab 1.2 and Dry Lab 1.3.
Provisional Timetable
Time | |
---|---|
8:45am - 9:00am | Registration |
Session 4 | Chair: Peter Hickey |
9:00am - 9:40am | How to advance science using Bioconductor Martin Morgan - keynote speaker |
9:40am - 9:55am | The RNAseq123 workflow package in Bioconductor Matthew Ritchie |
9:55am - 10:10am | ClinSV: Detection of clinically relevant structural and copy number variation from whole genome sequencing Andre Minoche |
10:10am - 10:15am | Experiences of a First-Time Package Contributor Stephen Pederson |
10:15am - 10:20am | schex avoids overplotting for large single cell RNA-sequencing datasets Saskia Freytag |
10:20am - 10:25am | COmapR: Genetic length calculation from crossover events Ruqian Lyu |
10:25am - 10:30am | Buffer time |
10:30am - 11:00am | Morning Tea (Provided) |
Session 5 | Chair: Marie Trussart |
11:00am - 11:20pm | Single cell analysis with Mass Cytometry; technology introduction and opportunities in clinical studies Helen McGuire - invited speaker |
11:20am - 12:00pm | On differential discovery in high-dimensional cytometry data Helena Crowell - keynote speaker |
12:00pm - 12:30pm | Ethics of precision medicine Lisa Dive |
12:30pm - 1:30pm | Lunch |
1:30pm - 3:30pm | Bioconductor Workshop Stream A: Helena Crowell - Differential discovery in high-dimensional cytometry data (description, materials) Bioconductor Workshop Stream B: Stuart Lee - Fluent genomics: a plyranges and tximeta case-study (description, materials) Bioinformatics Workshop Stream C: Dave Tang - Reproducible bioinformatics (description, materials) |
3:30pm - 3:50pm | Afternoon Tea (Provided) |
Session 5 | Chair: Dario Strbenac |
3:50pm - 4:45pm | Defining immune signatures of therapeutic response with non-negative matrix factorization of bulk and single cell data Elana Fertig - keynote speaker |
4:45pm - 5:00pm | Closing Remarks |
Contact
In Case of Questions
If you have any questions regarding the conference please email Peter viahickey@wehi.edu.au.
Conference Committee
- Peter Hickey, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
- Saskia Freytag, The Harry Perkins Institute
- Dario Strbenac, University of Sydney
- Stephen Pederson, University of Adelaide