Carnegie Mellon University
—
—
—
Search
Search
Search this site only
Ray and Stephanie Lane Computational Biology Department
School of Computer Science
School of Computer Science
›
Ray and Stephanie Lane Computational Biology Department
›
News
› 2009
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
CPCB Program Names New Directors
Drs Ivet Bahar and Robert F. Murphy, founding directors of the Joint Carnegie Mellon University-University of Pittsburgh PhD Program in Computational Biology (CPCB), passed leadership of the program... READ MORE
Monday, December 21, 2009
Dr. Karen Thickman Joins Computational Biology Department
The Lane Center is pleased to welcome Dr. Karen Thickman as an Assistant Teaching Professor! ...READ MORE
Monday, October 26, 2009
Eric Xing Receives USAF Young Investigator Award
Lane Center faculty member Eric Xing receives USAF Young Investigator Award.
Computational Biology Becomes Department In Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Computational Biology Becomes Department In Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science
Computational Biology Becomes Department In Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science
CPCB Program has First Graduate
Thursday, August 27, 2009
CPCB Program has First Graduate
Byoungkoo Lee is the first graduate of the CPCB program
Carnegie Mellon Leads $10 Million NSF Initiative To Develop Modeling Tools for Disease and Complex Systems
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Carnegie Mellon Leads $10 Million NSF Initiative To Develop Modeling Tools for Disease and Complex Systems
Group Led by Christopher Langmead won Best Contribution Award at 3Dsig meeting
Group Led by Christopher Langmead won Best Contribution Award at 3Dsig meeting
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Group Led by Christopher Langmead won Best Contribution Award at 3Dsig meeting
Group Led by Christopher Langmead won Best Contribution Award at 3Dsig meeting
Lane Faculty & Students Among Finalists in Grand Elsevier Challenge
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Lane Faculty & Students Among Finalists in Grand Elsevier Challenge
The Elsevier Grand Challenge attracted over 70 teams from around the world. Ten made the semi-final, from which four finalist were chosen. READ MORE...
Load more articles