The leaves are falling and there’s a crispness to the morning air. I suppose that means it’s time for a Crawford lab summer update! After looking back at my summer calendar, I am left wondering what I did. To be sure, it was filled with regular stuff. You know, grants, papers, and the occasional study […]
Category Archives: Crawford Crew
A Belated Spring 2017 Update
As I stare at my calendar, I am realizing that classes start in two and a half weeks. Geez, where did the summer go? Wait—what happened to spring??? Well, technically I did post about the 2017 Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing (PSB) and the 2017 Joint Summits on Translational Science before 2018 rolled around, so I […]
2017 Joint Summits on Translational Science
Informatics in all its different forms has without a doubt risen in popularity over the last five to ten years. Informatics is not exactly new and as a discipline or professional society has been around for several decades, evolving with the increase in the importance of computers. The recent surge in its popularity and cross-disciplinary […]
Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing (PSB) 2017: the aloha lives on!
It’s the first day of spring, so you know what that means! It means I haven’t posted since winter! Grant, papers, classes…what can I say? I have been very busy, indeed! But, there’s always time for PSB. Always. If you have read my previous posts, you know all about PSB. For the uninitiated, the Pacific […]
Recent Reflections
We are well into 2017, and I have yet to post an update on the lab’s accomplishments as of the end of 2016. If you were a human being like the rest of us living in 2016, you probably feel the same as many of us about that year. It was a year very much […]
Faculty positions available at CWRU
We have a trio of open faculty positions available here at CWRU. The positions are within the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, with some having the opportunity for an additional appointment in the Institute of Computational Biology: Tenure-Track/Tenured Faculty with Expertise in Biomedical Data Science Tenure-Track/Tenured Faculty Position in Cancer Epidemiology Director of the MPH […]
American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) 2016 in Vancouver, Canada
This year’s American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) was held—where else?—in Vancouver, Canada! Our northern neighbors invited human geneticists far and wide for five days of presentations, networking, and some scientific fun. Of course, I hardly ever pass up the opportunity to attend this meeting. As I have written before, ASHG is a great place […]
The Million Veteran Program (MVP) Phenotype Workshop in Washington, DC, September 12-13, 2016
It has been a few months since my last post, so you might be asking, “Girl, what have you been up to lately?” Well, let me tell you…. The fall semester is always crazy busy. Classes begin. Our annual symposium is in full swing. And, the conferences. So many conferences. One unexpected meeting to hit […]
Gordon Research Conference 2016, Human Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms & Disease, Mount Holyoke College
As I alluded in my previous post, I was invited to give talks at two prestigious meetings this year. The second meeting was the Gordon Research Conference Human Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms & Disease conference “Understanding the Mechanisms of Variant Effects in the Era of Genome Sequencing” held at Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts […]
Understanding the Function of Human Genome Variation, 2016 Keystone Symposia in Uppsala, Sweden
As a “mid-career” scientist (oh, I can’t believe I just wrote that), I find myself looking towards the next logical milestones on the path to promotion. One such milestone is an invitation to speak at a prestigious national or international meeting. I have given talks before at major conferences, but most were a result of […]
International Congress of Human Genetics (ICHG) 2016 in Kyoto, Japan
In a typical calendar year, my conference season tends to be concentrated to the fall semester, culminating with the Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing in the first week of January just before or as the spring semester begins. Travel outside this schedule is generally limited to special meetings such as NIH study section, consortium meetings, etc. […]
It’s the End of the Semester (Spring 2016)!
It’s the end of another semester, and in this case, another academic year. This past semester, I taught EPBI 444 Communicating in Population Health Science Research and co-organized EPBI 502 Seminar in Genetic Epidemiology and Bioinformatics. I don’t mind teaching all by myself, but it’s certainly more fun with friends! This past semester, I was […]