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CMSB 2009 : International Conference on Computational Methods in Systems BiologyConference Series : Computational Methods in Systems Biology | |||||||||||||||||
Link: http://cmsb09.cs.unibo.it/ | |||||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||||
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International Conference on COMPUTATIONAL METHODS IN SYSTEMS BIOLOGY (CMSB 2009) **************************************************** (first call for papers) August 31 -- September 1, 2009 Bologna, Italy http://cmsb09.cs.unibo.it/ ***************************************************** The CMSB (Computational Methods in Systems Biology) conference series was established in 2003 to help catalyze the convergence of modelers, physicists, mathematicians, and theoretical computer scientists (from fields such as language design, concurrency theory, program verification) with molecular biologists, physicians and neuroscientists interested in a systems-level understanding of cellular physiology and pathology. CMSB 2009 solicits original research articles, surveys of current research and posters. These may cover theoretical or applied contributions that are motivated by a biological question and can demonstrate actual or potential usefulness towards answering that question. Additionally, they may cover models of computation inspired by biological processes; of which the motivation may be either computational or biological. In particular, relevant case studies and open biological questions that demand modeling of systems are of significant interest. Topics of interest (biological systems and networks: inference, properties, modeling, dynamics, simulation and reverse engineering) include, but are not limited to: Modeling: -------- * Re-engineering and synthesis of biological systems and networks * Definition and study of theoretical properties of biologically-inspired formal languages * Qualitative and quantitative languages and calculi * Theoretical comparisons between different formal models of cellular processes * Models including symbolic evolution and learning * Spatial, multi-level, and multi-formalism modeling Simulation/Analysis: ------------------- * Simulation and analysis methods for computational biology * Biologically-inspired extensions to concurrency theory, constraint programming, logical methods or language equivalences * Emergence of properties in complex biological systems * Parallel, distributed, and multi-resolution simulation methods * Methods to predict biological network behavior from incomplete information Tools/Frameworks/Libraries: -------------------------- * Modeling, analysis and simulation tools * Differential, discrete and/or stochastic modeling-language frameworks * Visualization methods for computational biology * Biological databases and exchange formats for biological data and standards Applications: ------------ * Detailed biological case-studies on which formal models successfully apply * Computer models in nano-sciences applied to biological domains * Model-driven analysis of biological systems All submissions will be reviewed by the program committee. The proceedings of the conference will be published with Springer under the series named Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics, sub-series of Lecture Notes in Computer Science. The best papers presented at the Conference will be selected for a special issue of a Journal. Important Dates --------------- March, 16: Submission of abstracts March, 23: Submission of full papers May, 18: Notification of acceptance/rejection June, 15: Revised version of accepted papers due August 31 -- September 1: Conference PROGRAM COMMITTEE (provisional) ----------------- Pierpaolo Degano, Università di Pisa, Italy (co-chair) Finn Drablos, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway François Fages, INRIA Rocquencourt, France Stephen Gilmore, University of Edinburgh, UK Roberto Gorrieri, Università di Bologna, Italy (co-chair) Monika Heiner, TU Cottbus, Germany Adaoha Elizabeth C. Ihekwaba, CoSBI, Italy Marta Kwiatkowska, University of Oxford, UK Pietro Liò, Computing Lab Cambridge, UK Satoru Miyano, University of Tokyo, Japan Mark van Rossum, University of Edinburgh, UK Grzegorz Rozenberg, Leiden University, Leiden, NL Carolyn Talcott, Stanford Research Institute, USA Adelinde M. Uhrmacher, University of Rostock, Germany |
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