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  Presentations
1984-1989

Rat apolipoprotein A-IV nucleotide sequence contains 11 tandem repeat units for a 22-amino acid amphipathic segment

 1.  Minisymposium on Apolipoprotein Molecular Biology.  American Society of Biological Chemists 75th Annual Meeting, St. Louis, MO.  June 5, 1984

Structural Relations among the Mammalian Apolipoproteins

 2.  University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine Department of Medicine, Chicago, IL.  October 4, 1985

Comparative Analysis of Repeated Sequences in Rat HDL-associated Apolipoproteins A-I, A-IV and E

 3.  Minisymposium on Apolipoprotein Molecular Biology.  American Heart Association 57th Scientific Sessions, Miami, FL.  November 12, 1985

Molecular Systematics of the Apolipoproteins and their Genes 

 4.  Baylor College of Medicine Department of Medicine, Houston, TX.  February 21, 1985

Structure and Systematics of the Apo-A-IV Gene

 5.  Seventh International Atherosclerosis Symposium.  Workshop on Genetic Regulation of Apoprotein Synthesis, Melbourne, Australia.  October 8, 1985

Evolution of the Apolipoproteins

 6.  University of California at Los Angeles Molecular Biology Institute, Los Angeles, CA.  October 24, 1985

On Computer-assisted Analysis of Biological Sequences

 7.  University of Texas Health Science Center Department of Molecular Genetics, Dallas, TX.  August 1, 1986

The Importance of Repeated Sequences in Protein Structure and Evolution 

 8.  University of Michigan Medical Center Department of Pathology and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Ann Arbor, MI.  November 3, 1989

1990

Baroque Periodic Proteins and the Music of the Spheres 

 1.  Washington University Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, St. Louis, MO.  May 3, 1990

The Importance of Repetitive Protein Sequences in Biology and Medicine: Use of Medline as a Primary Tool for Basic Research in Molecular Biology

 2.  American Medical Informatics Association, Snowbird, UT.  June 23, 1990

Biosequence Databases: Concepts, Contents and Applications

 3.  Institute for Defense Analysis Supercomputer Research Center, Laurel, MD.  December 19, 1990

1991

Adventures in Information Space: Computers, Databases and the New Biology 

 1.  Washington University Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Biology, St. Louis, MO.  November 7, 1991

Integrated Information Retrieval in Molecular Biology: Application to Repetitive Sequence Proteins

 2.  University of Lausanne Institute of Biochemistry, Lausanne, Switzerland.  December 7, 1991

1992

The Importance of Repetitive Sequences in Protein Structure, Function and Evolution

 1.  US Naval Research Laboratory Center for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering, Washington, DC.  February 7, 1992

A Public Resource for Expressed Sequence Tags

 2.  Genome Mapping and Sequencing Meeting, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Banbury Center, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.  May 8, 1992

 3.  Genome Sequence and Analysis Conference IV.  Hilton Head, SC.  September 29, 1992

The Development and Uses of a New Database of Expressed Sequence Tags

 4.  Symposium on Sequence Analysis of Nucleic Acids and Proteins.  University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, NY.  October 29, 1992

Sequence Homologies and Motifs Among Proteins that Regulate Ras-like GTPases

 5.  Pennsylvania State University Department of Computer Science and the Institute for Molecular Evolutionary Genetics, University Park, PA.  November 11, 1992

1993

Adventures in Information Space: Biomedical Discoveries in Sequence Databases

 1.  Harvard University School of Medicine Countway Library of Medicine, Boston, MA.  April 2, 1993

Linking Yeast Genetics to Mammalian Genomes using dbEST - database of Expressed Sequence Tags

 2.  European Community Meeting on In silico Analysis of Yeast Chromosomes.  Orsay, France.  May 28, 1993

Update on dbEST - NCBI’s database for Expressed Sequence Tags

 3.  Genome Sequence and Analysis Conference V.  Hilton Head, SC.  October 25, 1993

How to make discoveries in molecular sequence databases

 4.  University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center Department of Biomathematics, Houston, TX.  November 9, 1993

GenBank and other computational resources at the U.S. National Center for Biotechnology Information

 5.  University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center Department of Biomathematics, Houston, TX.  November 10, 1993

1994

Research and Resources at the National Center for Biotechnology Information

 1.  University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO.  February 4, 1994

GenBank Select and a Chromocentric View of the Sequence Universe

 2.  Johns Hopkins University Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Baltimore, MD.  April 14, 1994

How to make discoveries in molecular sequence databases

 3.  Joint meeting of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the American Chemical Society.  San Francisco, CA.  May 22, 1994

Gene Discovery in NCBI’s Database of Expressed Sequence Tags

 4.  University of Washington Department of Molecular Biotechnology, Seattle, WA.  June 3, 1994

Adventures in Information Space: Biomedical Discovery in a Molecular Sequence Milieu

 5.  9th Annual Conference of the North American Serials Interest Group (Plenary Lecture).  Vancouver, Canada.  June 5, 1994

1995

How to make discoveries in DNA and protein sequence databases

  1.  Summer Research Conference.  American Urological Association, Houston, TX.  August 5, 1995

Integrated information retrieval for discovery in DNA and protein sequence databases

  2.  5th Annual Molecular Biology Conference.  Queenstown, New Zealand.  August 14, 1995

  3.  45th Annual meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics.  Minneapolis, MN.  October 25, 1995

The turning point in genome research

  4.  Zeneca Pharmaceuticals, Wilmington, DE.  October 30, 1995

  5.  Wyeth-Ayerst Research Laboratories, Princeton, NJ.  November 30, 1995

Adventures in Information Space: GenBank, Genomes and a Turning Point in Biomedical Research

  6.  University of Louisville School of Medicine Department of Biochemistry, Louisville, KY.  December 4, 1995

1996

Adventures in Information Space: GenBank, Genomes and a Turning Point in Biomedical Research

 1.  University of Minnesota Medical School Institute of Human Genetics, Minneapolis, MN.  February 22, 1996

 2.  University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Department of Molecular Genetics, Dallas, TX.  March 18, 1996

 3.  Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.  September 12, 1996

The Turning Point in Genome Research

 4.  Cambridge Healthtech Institute, San Francisco, CA. March 4, 1996

Internet for Oncologists: Hunting for Genes on the World Wide Web

 5.  32nd Annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.  Philadelphia, PA.  May 18, 1996

Hunting for Genes on the World Wide Web

 6.  Harvard Conference on the Internet and Society Health Care Track: Transforming Medicine.  Cambridge, MA.  May 30, 1996  

Hunting for Genes in Computer Databases

 7.  Institute of Medicine/National Academy of Sciences Annual Meeting, Washington, DC.  October 14, 1996

A gene map of the human genome

 8.  Conference on Yeast Genetics & Human Disease.  American Society for Microbiology, Baltimore, MD.  November 16, 1996

Bioinformatics

 9.  Discovery/Clinical Symposium on Molecular Medicine.  Wyeth-Ayerst Research, Inc., Princeton, NJ.  December 2, 1996

The Design of Bioinformatics Search Engines and Tools to Explore Genome Databases

10.  21st Century Biology: Informatics in the Post Genomic Era.  Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA.  December 19, 1996

1997

Bioinformatics Issues in Large-scale Studies of Gene Expression: Resources, LIMS and Query Systems

 1.  Meeting on Microarray Technologies and Applications. Tucson, AZ. January 22, 199

cDNAs: Phylum-hopping, Transcript Mapping and Gene Expression Applications

 2.  Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities ‘97: Techniques at the Genome/Proteome Interface.  Baltimore, MD.  February 12, 1997

Adventures in Information Space: GenBank, Genomes and a Turning Point in Biomedical Research.

 3.  Rockefeller University.  New York, NY.  February 20, 1997

 4.  Stanford University School of Medicine Department of Genetics, Palo Alto, CA.  May 30, 1997

 5.  Association of American Medical Colleges (Keynote Address). Leesburg, VA. September 25, 1997

 6.  Research Genetics, Inc., Huntsville, AL.  October 2, 1997

 7.  Affymetrix, Inc., Santa Clara, CA.  October 13, 1997 |PDF|

 8.  Catholic University, Washington, DC.  December 1, 1997

Narrowing the Gap between Sequence and Function

 9.  Symposium on Bioinformatics and the Discovery of Novel Therapeutics.  New York Academy of Sciences, New York, NY.  February 25, 1997

21st Century Library of Medicine: The Books are Our Genes

10. Symposium on Genomics and Gene Therapy: Meaning for the Future of Science and Medicine.  Harvard Institute of Human Genetics, Cambridge, MA.  March 26, 1997

Closing the Gap between Sequence and Function

11.  5th Annual Nature Genetics Conference: Functional Genomics from Genes to Drugs.  Washington, DC.  April 17, 1997 

Closing the Gap between Sequence and Function: Bioinformatics and High-throughput Biology

12.  University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.  May 31, 1997

1998

Data Management and Analysis for Gene Expression Arrays 

 1.  2nd Workshop on Methods and Applications of DNA Microarray Technology.  Tucson, AZ.  January 11, 1998

Adventures in Information Space: GenBank, Genomes and a Turning Point in Biomedical Research

 1.  Emory University Center for Molecular Medicine, Atlanta, GA.  March 5, 1998 

 2.  Symposium on Biotechnology Education.  Museum of Science, Boston, MA.  March 9, 1998

 3.  University of Michigan Department of Genetics, Ann Arbor, MI.  March 16, 1998

 4.  Pharmacology: Session on Utilizing the Resources of the Genome Project. 

 5.  Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, San Francisco, CA.  April 19, 1998

 6.  Careers Symposium.  Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN.  May 1, 1998

 7.  Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, Fairfax, VA.  June 4, 1998

 8. Medical Scientist Training Program Annual Retreat (Distinguished Alumni Lecture).  Washington University, Potosi, MO.  September 26, 1998

 9. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC. November 9, 1998

10. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, TN.  December 4, 1998

11. National Institute of General Medical Sciences, Bethesda, MD. December 10, 1998

Comparative Genomics of Rodents and Humans with Applications to QTL Mapping

12. Workshop on QTL Mapping.  National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Rockville, MD.  August 21, 1998

Large Scale Gene Expression Technologies: Closing the Gap Between Sequence and Function

13. Strategic Technologies Seminar Series. National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD. October 22, 1998

Closing the Gap between Sequence and Function: The Frontier of Computational Biology and Functional Genomics

14. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC. November 9, 1998

15. Glycobiology ’98.  Baltimore, MD. November 12, 1998

1999

Overview and Discussion of the Emerging Field of Bioinformatics

 1.  Spellman College, Atlanta, GA.  January 22, 1999

Closing the Gap between Sequence and Function: The Frontier of Functional Genomics 

 2.  193rd Meeting of the Advisory Council.  National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, Bethesda, MD.  February 4, 1999

 3.  Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, CA.  March 3, 1999

 4.  Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Department of Biomedical Engineering, Baltimore, MD.  March 19, 1999

 5.  HUGO Human Genome Meeting.  Brisbane, Australia.  March 28, 1999

 6.  University of Pennsylvania Department of Genetics, Philadelphia, PA.  April 12, 1999

 7.  Symposium on Bioinformatics and Genomics in the 21st Century.  University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX.  April 15, 1999

 8.  Experimental Biology Short Course on Surfing the Genome.  American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Washington, DC.  April 17, 1999

Adventures in Information Space: A Turning Point in Biomedical Research

 9.  CHI 6th Annual Conference on the Human Genome Project: Commercial Implications. San Francisco, CA.  March 1, 1999

Reflections on Functional Genomics: Technology Development & Research Applications  

10.  Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Banbury Center, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.  April 28, 1999

Bridging the Gap between Genomes and Function: The Frontier of Computational Biology and Functional Genomics 

11.  Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.  June 9, 1999

12.  Advanced Topics in Molecular Genetics Lecture Series.  FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research and Development, Rockville, MD.  December 7, 1999

13.  9th Annual Robert Steel Foundation International Symposium: Genomics and Cancer.  Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Rockefeller Research Laboratories, New York, NY.  October 14, 1999

Higher Bandwidths through the Bottleneck: Semi-automated Approaches to Expression Array Interpretation

14.  The Nature Genetics Microarray Meeting. Scottsdale, AZ. September 23, 1999

15.  Advances in Genome Sciences Seminar Series.  University of Michigan and Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Company, Ann Arbor, MI.  October 11, 1999

16.  Merck Genome Research Institute, Dakin House, PA.  October 21, 1999

17.  Bridging the Gap between Genomes and Function: The Frontier of Computational Biology and Functional Genomics. 

In Vivo, In Vitro, In Silico: The Convergence of Biotechnology and Information Technology 

18.  Intramural Staff Retreat.  National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, Airlie, VA.  October 18, 1999  

In Vivo, In Vitro, In Silico: The Frontier of Computational Biology and Functional Genomics 

19.  National Research Council Board of Science.  U.S. National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC.  October 25, 1999

20.  Life Sciences Consortium Colloquium.  Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA.  November 9, 1999

21.  Genomic Science Seminar Series.  North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC.  November 15, 1999

22.  Conference on Genome Diversity and Bioinformatics.  Federation of Asian and Oceanian Biochemists and Molecular Biologists, Dunedin, New Zealand.  December 2, 1999

2000

Bridging the Gap between Genomes and Function: The Frontier of Computational Biology and Functional Genomics

 1.  Annual meeting of the Society of Medical Administrators.  Naples, FL.  January 10, 2000

Higher Bandwidths through the Bottleneck: Semi-automated Approaches to Expression Array Interpretation

 2.  Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.  January 17, 2000

 3.  Functional Genomics Lecture Series.  Whitehead Institute/MIT, Cambridge, MA.  February 24, 2000

 4.  Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY.  March 15, 2000

 5.  Agilent Technologies Chemical/Life Sciences Division, Palo Alto, CA.  August 2, 2000 |PDF|

 6.  Chips, SNPs and Functional Genomics Lecture Series.  Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Baltimore, MD.  April 28, 2000

In Vivo, In Vitro, In Silico: The Frontier of Computational Biology and Functional Genomics

 7.   Bioinformatics Symposium.  Princeton University, Princeton, NJ.  January 19, 2000

 8.   The Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.  February 9, 2000

 9.   University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA.  February 20, 2000

10.  The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.  February 17, 2000

11.  11th Forum on High Technology in the 21st Century (Keynote Adress).  Nippon Telegraph and Telephone, Tokyo, Japan.  April 6, 2000 |PDF|

2001

In Vivo, In Vitro, In Silico: Challenges and Opportunities in Post-Genome Biology 

 1. Boehringer-Ingelheim. Ridgefield, CT.  March 14, 2001

Experimental annotation of the human genome using microarray technology 

 2. University of Washington, Seattle, WA.  April 4, 2001 |PDF|

What is Bioinformatics? 

 3. Session on the Business/IP Interface in Bioinformatics.  Biotechnology Industrial Organization International Convention and Exhibition.  San Diego, CA.  June 26, 2001 |PDF|

Research Challenges and Opportunities in Post-genome Biology 

 4. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN.  October 1, 2001

 5. The Genome Institute of the Novartis Foundation, La Jolla, CA.  October 31, 2001

Genomics: past, present and future  

 6. American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY. November 10, 2001

2002

Genomics: past, present and future  

 1. University of Washington Department of Genome Sciences, Seattle, WA.  January 30, 2002

Bioinformatics and genome sciences 

 2. Transcriptome 2002: From Functional Genomics to Systems Biology.  Seattle, WA.  March 10, 2002

Bioinformatics: past, present and future

 3. Inaugural Symposium. Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle, WA.  March 26, 2002

Bioinformatics and Genome Sciences

 4. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.  April 4, 2002

 5. Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN.  April 9, 2002

 6. Radiation Research Society 49th Annual Meeting.  Reno, NV.  April 24, 2002

 7. Harvard-Partners Center for Genetics and Genomics, Boston, MA. May 9, 2002

 8. Zymogenetics, Inc., Seattle, WA.  May 15, 2002

Pharmacogenomic studies of the Pregnane X Receptor and Its Target Genes  

 9. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA. June 6, 2002

The Emergence of actual Human Disease as a Model for Discovery Research |PDF|

10. Bay Area Clinical Genomics Symposium.  Mid-Atlantic Clinical Genomics Symposium.  Princeton, NJ.  September 9, 2002

11. Bay Area Clinical Genomics Symposium.  San Francisco, CA.  October 25, 2002

12. Chips-to-Hits® Conference.  Philadelphia, PA.  October 28, 2002

13. Washington Biotechnology and Biomedical Association, Seattle, WA.  November 13, 2002 |PDF|

Bioinformatics: past, present and future

14. The Salk Institute, La Jolla, CA.  September 19, 2002

15. Biomedical Computation Symposium (BCATS). Stanford University School of Medicine Department of Genetics, Palo Alto, CA.  October 26, 2002

16. Montana State University, Bozeman, MT. November 8, 2002

2003-2004

Bioinformatics: past, present and future

 1. Canadian Bioinformatics Workshop. Vancouver, Canada.  February 17, 2003

 2. Boston University Bioinformatics Graduate Program, Boston, MA. March 27, 2003

Intersections of Genomics, Bioinformatics and Neuroscience

 3. Neurogenomics Research Symposium at the Society for Neuroscience 33rd Annual Meeting. New Orleans, LA.  November 6, 2003

 4. Stowers Institute, Kansas City, MO.  April 23, 2004

Neurogenomics and the Allen Brain Atlas

 5. A Decade of Neuroscience Informatics: Looking Ahead.  National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD. April 26, 2004 |Mental Health|PDF|

 6. Bio-IT World Conference.  Boston, MA. April 31, 2004

 7. Symposium on The Biology of Genomes.  Cold Spring Harbor, NY. May 13, 2004

2005-2007

The End of the Interlude?  Reflections on Bioinformatics, Proteomics, Systems Biology

     and Experimental Medicine

 1. BioSilico 2005.  Cambridge, MA.  October 25, 2005

 2. MIT Enterprise Forum of Cambridge.  Cambridge, MA.  February 8, 2006

 3. IBM Research, Westchester, NY. July 25, 2006

 4. Northeastern University, Boston, MA.  September 28, 2006.

Proteomics, Systems Biology and Knowledge Mining in Drug and Biomarker Discovery |PDF|

 5.  Microsoft eScience Workshop.  Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. October 13, 2006

 6.  Microsoft Biotechnology Executives Forum.  Cambridge, MA. October 19, 2006

 7.  University of Basel Biozentrum, Basel, Switzerland.  October 26, 2006

 8.  J.B. Little Symposium.  Harvard School of Public Health.  Boston, MA.  November 3, 2006

 9.  Broad Institute.  Cambridge, MA.  May 2, 2007

10. Duke University Institute for Genome Science and Policy.  Durham, NC.  June 27, 2007

11. Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School.  Boston, MA.  September 11, 2007

12. Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Department of Biomedical Informatics.  Nashville, TN.  November 7, 2007

13. Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Dept. of Pathology. Boston, MA.  November 9, 2007

14. University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.  December 5, 2007.

2008

Proteomics, Systems Biology and Knowledge Mining in Drug and Biomarker Discovery

1. Keystone Symposium on Biomarker Discovery, Validation and Applications (co-organizer), Granilbakken Conference Center, Lake Tahoe,CA.  February 3-8, 2008 |PDFSee also TLA talk, Glossary and Meeting Report.

2. Princeton University, Lewis-Silger Institute, Quantitative and Computational Biology Seminar Series,  Princeton, NJ.  February 18, 2008

3. Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Kansas City, MO.  February 21, 2008

 

"Is the World Ready for MyGenomeOnTheWeb.com?" Panel Discussion, BioInnovations 2008, MIT Sloan School of Management, Cambridge, MA.  April 18, 2008.  Work cited: The Incidentalome: A Threat to Genomic Medicine and Leaping beyond the genome—what lies ahead? and The Genotype Diet

Online Health Information Retrieval by Consumers and the Challenge of Personal Genomics.  Futures Conference on Personalized Medicine, The Gulf Coast Consortia.  Houston, TX.  June 14, 2008.  Material cited: Chapter 21 in Genomic and Personalized Medicine, H. Willard and G. Ginsburg, eds.  Elsevier 2008, in press.

 

Clinical and Recreational Genomics: Personal Experiences with Direct-To-Consumer Genotyping.

1. Massachusetts General Hospital, Psychiatric Genetics Program.  Boston, MA.  September 16, 2008. Handouts for talk: 23andme Getting Started Guide, Navigenics White Paper, NEJM Perspective on Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA).

2. Combined Pathology Grand Rounds.  Brigham and Women's Hospital.  Boston, MA. October 6, 2008.  Powerpoint presentation, William Neaves' address to the College of American Pathologist in 2002, Conditions currently covered by 23andMe, deCODEme and Navigenics.

 

 

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