-
Deanne Taylor's profile
I'm female and a Boston user
-
What I do
Doctorate from the University of Michigan’s Biophysics Program focusing on solid-state NMR theory of coherence transfer.
Harvard: Research Scientist at the Harvard School of Public Health , where I support the Bioinformatics Core activities as well as engage in my own research.
Brandeis: Program Chair and (most recent) designer of the Bioinformatics Graduate Program at the Brandeis Rabb School of Professional Continuing Studies
At Brandeis, I teach a course every semester, something like:
Introduction to Bioinformatics Scripting and Programming (Fall 2007)
Computational Systems Biology
(Spring 2008)Design and Analysis of Microarray Experiments (Summer 2008)
Advanced Topics in Computational Biology (Fall 2008).
In the past, I have taught several other courses such as
General Chemistry (undergraduate)
Nucleic Acids Sequence Structure Function and Genomics (graduate)
Accelerated course in General, Organic and Biochemistry (transitional)
- Blog:
- Confluxion
-
Affiliations
Current affiliations
-
- Position
- Research Scientist. Program Chair, Bioinformatics Graduate Program.
- Company
- Harvard School of Public Health, Brandeis University
- Further information
-
-
Interests
Just about anything in science, engineering, or technology interests me on an intellectual level. I’m especially interested in those topics at the borders of physical and information science and biology. I’m also interested (intellectually) in high-energy physics, cosmology, and astrophysics.
Ernest Rutherford is credited with saying “All science is either physics or stamp collecting.” I do a bit of both. My research examines the statistical mechanics of how biological networks evolve, and does some stamp collecting by examining the forms of variation in biological systems.
-
Projects
-
Publications
Warren P, Taylor DM, Martini PGV, Jackson J, Bienkowska J. PANP - a New Method of Gene Detection on Oligonucleotide Expression Arrays Proceedings of the 7th IEEE International Conference on Bioinformatics and Bioengineering (2007)
Splice variants of the relaxin and INSL3 receptors reveal unanticipated molecular complexity. Mol Hum Reprod. , 591-600 (2005) (Epub 28 Jul 2005) PubMed ID:(16051677)
Coherence Transfer through Homonuclear Dipolar Coupling in an Unoriented Two Spin-1/2 Solid-State System J Mol Struct , 115-124 (2002)
"Orientation of Amide-Nitrogen-15 Chemical Shift Tensors in Peptides: A Quantum Chemical Study J Am Chem Soc , 914-922 (2001) PubMed ID:(11456625)
Analysis of dipolar-coupling-mediated coherence transfer in a homonuclear two spin-12 solid-state system J Magn Reson. , 18-28 (1999) PubMed ID:(10527739)
-
Deanne Taylor's activity on Nature Network
-
Entries
There are no recent entries from Deanne Taylor.
-
Network
-
Groups
- Biomolecular NMR spectroscopy
- Complexity and Computability
- physics
- Genetics
- Embryonic Stem Cells
- Bioinformatics
- Semantic Web for the Life Sciences
- OpenWetWare
- Brandeis University
- Molecular evolution
- Harvard University
- Harvard School of Public Health
- Integrative Bioinformatics & Network Biology
- Harvard affiliates
- NNB Events
-
Tags
-
-