Call for Papers and Posters
Computational Challenges in Comparative Genomics
A Pacific
Symposium on Biocomputing 2010
Session
January 4-8, 2010
Fairmont Orchid, The Big Island of Hawaii
Hawaii, U.S.A.
Background
Comparative genomics has become a valuable tool in the study of
cancer, of genetic diseases, of infertility, of pathogenicity and
virulence of microbial parasites and of the evolution of species
important to agriculture, agronomy, forestry and fishery. While
pairwise comparisons of organisms and their genomes have long been a
crucial tool in gene hunting and genome annotation, comparing several
genomes at once only became possible in the last few years as
sufficient numbers of genomes were released. The computational
challenges are many and often very hard: almost every computational
question about genomes is much more complex than analogous questions
about DNA or protein sequences.
Research areas include construction of syntenic blocks from genome
data; gene family evolution, including duplication and loss models,
detection of horizontal transfer, and assignment of orthologs;
identification of whole-genome duplication events; models and
algorithms for genome rearrangements; reconstruction of ancestral
genomes; detection of reticulation events; phylogenetic
reconstruction from whole genomes; and uses of comparative genomic
methods in evolution and systematics, in population genetics and
genetic screening, in research into cancer, inherited disorders and
human pathogens, and in agriculturally significant organisms. Such
research includes model development, algorithm design, high-performance
computing implementations, machine learning, data integration,
analysis pipelines, and, of course, new insights into biology.
Session Theme
We invite contributions with a substantial and innovative computational
component (such as computational models, algorithms, simulation studies, and
computationally innovative analyses of biological data) in all areas of
comparative genomics, including, but not limited to, gene family evolution,
ancestral genome reconstruction, and integration with population genetics.
Note that all submissions must demonstrate the relevance to the session theme. Session Co-chairs
Bernard Moret, Ph.D., EPFL (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), bernard.moret@epfl.ch Webb Miller, Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University, wcm2@psu.edu Pavel Pevzner, Ph.D., University of California at San Diego, ppevzner@cs.ucsd.edu David Sankoff, Ph.D., University of Ottawa, sankoff@uottawa.ca
Submission Information
Please note that the submitted papers are reviewed and accepted on a competitive basis.
At least three reviewers will be assigned to each submitted manuscript.
Important Dates
•
Paper submission
deadline: July 13, 2009
•
Notification of paper
acceptance: September 10, 2009
•
Camera-ready copy
deadline: September 21, 2009
All deadlines are at midnight
Pacific Standard Time.
Paper Format
Please see the PSB paper format template and instructions at http://psb.stanford.edu/psb-online/psb-submit.
If unsure whether your paper fits the session theme, please contact
Bernard Moret or one
of the co-chairs.
The file formats we accept are: Postscript
(*.ps) and Portable Document Format (*.pdf).
Attached files should be named with the last name of the first author
(e.g., altman.ps or altman.pdf). Hardcopy submissions or
unprocessed TEX or LATEX files will be rejected without review.
Each paper must be accompanied by a cover letter. The cover letter must
state the following:
• The email address
of the corresponding author
• The specific PSB session that should review the paper or
abstract
• The submitted paper contains original, unpublished results, and
is not currently under consideration elsewhere.
• All co-authors concur with the contents of the paper.
Submitted papers are limited to twelve (12) pages in our publication
format. Please format your paper according to instructions found at
http://psb.stanford.edu/psb-online/psb-submit/.
If figures cannot be easily resized and placed precisely in the text,
then it should be clear that with appropriate modifications, the total
manuscript length would be within the page limit.
Contact Russ Altman (psb.hawaii @ gmail.com) for
additional information about paper submission requirements.