affiliated research projects


Bio-STORM
The Bio-STORM project involves surveillance of publicly available databases to detect patterns suggestive of incipient epidemics, possibly the result of potential acts of bioterrorism. Research addresses problems of data integration, high-performance problem solving, and elucidation of new analytic approaches for pattern detection.

Collagen
Linking Collagen Genotypes to Molecular Phenotypes
Collagen is the most abundant protein in humans, and mutations in collagen can lead to death or disease.  The ways in which individual mutations affect collagen structure/function are poorly understood.  Collagen is a fibrillar protein, and thus many of the principles elucidated for the study of globular proteins are not immediately applicable in investigating the relationship between its structure and function. We now have an opportunity to use genomic technologies to survey the variation in key collagen genes throughout the human population, link the discovered polymorphisms to their structural effects, and develop an understanding of the mechanism of collagenous disorders.

Chronus
The Chronus project is a long-term research program at Stanford Medical Informatics to advance temporal database theory and temporal querying methods for software applications in clinical care and biomedical research. The open-source Chronus system is currently being evaluated in the context of guideline-based decision support and HIV drug resistance research.

E-Preference
The goal of the e-Preference project, which is funded by Stanford's Center on Advancing Decision Making for Aging, is to use ontologies and influence diagrams as the software foundation for patient-centered decision aids. The e-Preference tool integrates knowledge from domain experts with patient preferences to support shared decision making in clinical care.

EON
The focus of the EON project is the automation of best practices in medicine and evaluation of knowledge-based techniques to enhance clinician adherence to clinical practice guidelines and clinical protocols.

FEATURE
FEATURE is a research program for characterizing and recognizing active sites, binding sites, and other sites of functional/structural importance in macromolecules. It's goal is to annotate new protein structures with functional information, in order to assist in creating a link between biological structure and function.

Konark
The Konark project is focused on the development of an integrated framework to combine database querying, data abstraction, and data and text mining methods for temporal knowledge discovery and integration in biomedical research domains, particularly those involving analysis of time-course data in translational bioinformatics.

PharmGKB
The PharmGKB is the Pharmacogenetics & Pharmacogenomics Knowledgebase. Pharmacogenomics is the study of how variation in the human genome contributes to variation in drug response. The PharmGKB stores information about genes, drugs, diseases, drug-related pathways, drug-related phenotypes, and the literature that describes current knowledge.

Protege
Protégé is the most widely used system in the world for creating and managing online biomedical knowledge bases. Current work involves development of enhanced methods for using Protege to construct knowledge-based systems, including reusing problem-solving components, simplifying conceptual modeling, and developing new applications for the Semantic Web.

Simbios
Simbios is a National Center for Biomedical Computation focused on physics-based simulation of biological structure--from molecules to entire organisms. It has two goals: to perform innovative research in methods for simulation and analysis of biological dynamics, and to disseminate tools and models to the entire biomedical research community, through the SimTK site