Mathematical, Statistical and Computational Aspects of the New Science of Metagenomics Podcast

Mathematical, Statistical and Computational Aspects of the New Science of Metagenomics

Cambridge University
Metagenomics is the study of the total genomic content of microbial communities. In metagenomic studies, DNA material is sampled collectively from the microorganisms that populate the environment of interest (e.g. agricultural soil, ocean water, or the human gut). The extracted DNA sequences are subsequently used to profile the environment and its biodiversity, its dominant microbial classes or biological functions, and whether and how this profile differs from those of other environments. This research programme will bring together leading expertise in the multiple disciplines involved in metagenomics including mathematics, computer science, probability and statistics, biomedical research and biology. Read more at http://www.newton.ac.uk/programmes/MTG/
Inferring genotype-phenotype relationships from (meta-)genomes
McHardy, AC (Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf) Thursday 27 March 2014, 09:30-10:30
Jun 2, 2014
54 min
Video
Modelling macroecological patterns: Neutral theory and beyond
Recording stopped before end of talk due to unpublished work - Cornell, S (University of Liverpool) Tuesday 01 April 2014, 15:00-16:00
Apr 14, 2014
33 min
Video
Why mixture modelling?
Holmes, S (Stanford University) Wednesday 02 April 2014, 15:00-16:30
Apr 10, 2014
1 hr 28 min
Video
Lessons learned from operating a big metagenomics resource
Meyer, F (Argonne National Laboratory, USA) Monday 24 March 2014, 11:30-12:30
Apr 2, 2014
58 min
Video
Burrows-Wheeler Transform (BWT) based methods for assembly and haplotype analysis
Durbin, R (Welcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge, UK) Tuesday 25 March 2014, 13:45-14:45
Apr 2, 2014
1 hr 7 min
Video
Reasonable names and reasonable terms for Bacteria and Archaea
Garrity, GM (Michigan State University and NamesforLife, LLC) Monday 24 March 2014, 13:45-14:45
Apr 2, 2014
56 min
Video
Waste Not, Want Not: Why Rarefying Microbiome Data is not an optimal normalization procedure
Holmes, S (Stanford University) Friday 28 March 2014, 11:45-12:30
Mar 31, 2014
57 min
Video
Microbiome, Metagenomics and High-dimensional Compositional Data Analysis
Li, H (University of Pennsylvania ) Friday 28 March 2014, 09:30-10:15
Mar 31, 2014
55 min
Video
Linking taxa to function through contig clustering of microbial metagenomes
Quince, C (University of Glasgow) Friday 28 March 2014, 13:45-14:30
Mar 31, 2014
43 min
Video
Application of Bayesian model averaging and population Monte Carlo to inference from metagenomic mixture
Morfopoulou, S (University College London) Friday 28 March 2014, 14:30-15:00
Mar 31, 2014
30 min
Video
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