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Web Content News Turtle Tree of Life |
Web Content News Turtle Tree of Life |
Web Content TACC Offers New, Broader Computational Biology Software Stack to Open Science Community One of the fastest growing areas in science is comparative genomics, which is driven by advances in next-generation sequencing technology. |
Web Content Rock Snot Genomics University of Texas researchers use advanced sequencing and TACC's Ranger supercomputer to uncover origin of common algae |
Web Content How to see living machines |
Web Content Opening the spigot at XSEDE |
Web Content Comet Tree of Life A new ‘tree of life’, depicting the evolution of life on this planet that includes more than 1,000 new types of bacteria and Archaea lurking in the Earth’s nooks and crannies |
Web Content Teaching Computers to Recognize Unhealthy Guts |
Web Content Lessons of a Tadpole |
Web Content Evolution Used Same Genetic Formula to Turn Animals Monogamous Scientists rely on XSEDE to compare massive amounts of genetic data across species |
Web Content Pulsating Cells Research using XSEDE supercomputers studies bioelectric effects of cells to develop new anti-cancer strategies. Cell membranes are the key regulating factor for biological processes at the... |
Web Content Function Follows Form Simulations on XSEDE Resource plus Lab Work on Frog Neuromuscular Junction Sheds Light on Human Diseases |
Web Content Cell's Energy Secrets Revealed with Supercomputers XSEDE allocations on TACC's Stampede2, Ranch systems help develop most detailed model yet of mitochondrial protein-protein complex |
Web Content Novel Molecular Dynamics Captures Atomic-level Detail of CRISPR-Cas9 Activity XSEDE Resources Help Break the “Millisecond Barrier” for Complex Biological Simulations |
Web Content Tools of the 21st Century: HPC, Analytical Ultracentrifugation and a New Detector UTRC, XSEDE HPC resources used to help uncover a new protein interaction |
Web Content Comet Tree of Life A new ‘tree of life’, depicting the evolution of life on this planet that includes more than 1,000 new types of bacteria and Archaea lurking in the Earth’s nooks and crannies |
Web Content Opening the spigot at XSEDE A boost from sequencing technologies and computational tools is in store for scientists studying how cells change which of their genes are active. |
Web Content How to see living machines It sounds like something out of the Borg in Star Trek. Nano-sized robots self-assemble to form biological machines that do the work that keeps one alive. And yet something like this really does go on. |
Web Content Teaching Computers to Recognize Unhealthy Guts A new proof-of-concept study by researchers from the University of California San Diego has succeeded in training computers to "learn" what a healthy versus an unhealthy gut microbiome looks like... |
Web Content Lessons of a Tadpole The flow of information between cells in our bodies is exceedingly complex: sensing, signaling, and influencing each other in a constant flow of microscopic engagements. These interactions are... |