Bioinformatics Research Network
Bioinformatics Research Network (BRN) is a non-profit open-science research-based organization aiming to provide volunteer opportunities and bioinformatics research training that is free and open to everyone. It was established in March 2021 and later legally registered as a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization[1]. Its main goal is to establish a worldwide network that is open to anyone interested in bioinformatics irrespective of his/her academic background and to provide bioinformatics training, mentorship and the opportunity to collaborate on exciting research projects.
Training and Projects
BRN provides free training workshops through its partner group Bioinformatics Interest Group [2][3]. BIG is a student club of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio established to promote the development of student bioinformaticians and encourage the growth of bioinformatics skills in the community.[4] BRN is open to academic labs to host projects for open collaboration. These projects are then available for everyone to contribute. To work on a project, a volunteer has to complete the required training requirements for the specific project and apply to the respected team. The decision to allow the volunteer to work depends on the team of the respective project.
Leadership Team
- Henry Miller - President of the Board
- Dr. Wes Wilson - Vice President of the Board
- Ellora Chua - Secretary of the Board
- Linda Araya - Treasurer of the Board
- Kolbi Gray - Chief Executive Officer
- Julian Borbeck - Deputy Director
- Daniel Muldoon - Chief Operations Officer
- Manwal Harb - Officer of the Board
- Oliver Powell - Officer of the Board
Publication
BRN has published its projects in BioRxiv[5][6] and recently published its first peer-reviewed publication[7].
References
- ^ "Bioinformatics Research Network - IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search". www.irs.gov/. Retrieved 2022-02-09.
- ^ "Bioinformatics Research Network - About". BRN. Retrieved 2022-02-09.
- ^ "Bioinformatics Interest Group". BIG Bioinformatics. Retrieved 2022-02-09.
- ^ "Student Groups". UT Health San Antonio. 2018-09-19. Retrieved 2022-02-09.
- ^ Miller, H. E.; Montemayor, D.; Abdul, J.; Vines, A.; Levy, S.; Hartono, S.; Sharma, K.; Frost, B.; Chedin, F.; Bishop, A. J. R. (2021-11-04). "Quality-controlled R-loop meta-analysis reveals the characteristics of R-Loop consensus regions": 2021.11.01.466823. doi:10.1101/2021.11.01.466823.
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(help) - ^ Miller, H. E.; Montemayor, D.; Li, J.; Levy, S.; Pawar, R.; Hartono, S.; Sharma, K.; Frost, B.; Chedin, F.; Bishop, A. J. R. (2021-11-04). "Exploration and analysis of R-loop mapping data with RLBase": 2021.11.01.466854. doi:10.1101/2021.11.01.466854.
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(help) - ^ Ilieva, Mirolyuba; Miller, Henry E.; Agarwal, Arav; Paulus, Gabriela K.; Madsen, Jens Hedelund; Bishop, Alexander J. R.; Kauppinen, Sakari; Uchida, Shizuka (2022-02-09) [2022-01-28]. "FibroDB: Expression Analysis of Protein-Coding and Long Non-Coding RNA Genes in Fibrosis". Non-Coding RNA. 8 (1): 13. doi:10.3390/ncrna8010013.
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