Biology is increasingly joining the ranks of the data-intensive sciences through increased use of “-omics” technologies (next-generation sequencing, expression profiling, proteomics, methylation studies, etc.) and the large-scale use of a variety of imaging technologies in research. This is great for scientists and the patients who are going to benefit from the research, but it poses …
Tag Archive: NCI
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2013/04/15/computational-needs-for-large-scale-data-analysis-towards-a-cancer-knowledge-cloud/
Feb 20
NCIP’s Open-Development Strategy Enables Community-Driven Cancer Informatics Software Development
The NCIP is committed to advancing cancer research through improving biomedical informatics, and we believe that active participation by the broad community is the most effective way to accomplish this. To that end, we have made significant advances in our plan to engage the biomedical-research, informatics, and developer communities by lowering the barrier to community-driven …
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2013/02/20/ncips-open-development-strategy-enables-community-driven-cancer-informatics-software-development/
Sep 28
NCIP News Update, September 28, 2012
Welcome to NCIP News Update, our regularly reoccuring blog post of NCIP news and information. Please check in regularly to receive details about NCIP as we continue to evolve this new program. Links to these updates will also be published via the @NCI_NCIP Twitter account, the NCIP Announce listserv, and the NCIP LinkedIn Group. As …
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2012/09/28/ncip-news-update-september-28-2012/
Aug 15
Ephemeral Images, Indelible Data: The Promises and Challenges of Digital Imaging as Applied to Pathology
Those of us working in biomedical informatics are well aware that one of our omnipresent challenges is overcoming the disparity between our capacity to use high-throughput research technologies to produce huge quantities of data, which is now very high, and our practical ability to store, aggregate, analyze, and integrate the resulting mountains of heterogeneous …
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2012/08/15/ephemeral-images-indelible-data-the-promises-and-challenges-of-digital-imaging-as-applied-to-pathology/
Aug 03
Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) Bioinformatics
The NCI-supported Cooperative Groups conduct national- and international-scale multicenter clinical trials. They face escalating computational challenges as the amount of clinical trials data generated by a multiplicity of research technologies and clinical observations continues to expand. As part of our ongoing Speaker Series, we recently invited Dr. Ying Xiao to discuss informatics initiatives being undertaken …
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2012/08/03/radiation-therapy-oncology-group-rtog-bioinformatics/
Jul 26
Getting There from Here: Four Considerations for Transitioning to Open Development
”So what do we do? Anything. Something. So long as we just don’t sit there. If we screw it up, start over. Try something else. If we wait until we’ve satisfied all the uncertainties, it may be too late.” Lee Iacocca I came across Iacocca’s statement late last week, and it struck me as an …
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2012/07/26/getting-there-from-here-4-considerations-for-transitioning-to-open-development/
Jul 20
NCIP News Update – July 20, 2012
Welcome to the first NCIP News Update, our bi-weekly blog post of NCIP news and information. Please check in regularly to receive details about NCIP as we continue to evolve this new program. Links to these updates will also be published via the @NCI_NCIP Twitter account, the NCIP Announce listserv, and the NCIP LinkedIn Group. …
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2012/07/20/ncip-news-update-july-20-2012/
Jul 17
G-DOC: Enabling Systems Medicine Through Innovations in Informatics
These are exciting times for cancer research. The rapid evolution and decreasing cost of omics technologies provide unprecedented opportunities to improve individual patient diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. To fully realize this goal, however, requires integrating and analyzing data from the laboratory and the clinic in a way that is meaningful and useful to health-care providers. …
Permanent link to this article: http://ncip.nci.nih.gov/blog/2012/07/17/g-doc-enabling-systems-medicine-through-innovations-in-informatics/



