Bioinformatics Workshop 2013: Difference between revisions

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#"Running the Program" (pg.37). Input your own sequences. Show input and output, but do NOT print the source code.  
#"Running the Program" (pg.37). Input your own sequences. Show input and output, but do NOT print the source code.  
#"Putting Your Skills into Practice" Q6 & Q7 (pg.37-38). Show source code (Q7 only), input (Q6 & Q7), and outputs (Q6 & Q7).
#"Putting Your Skills into Practice" Q6 & Q7 (pg.37-38). Show source code (Q7 only), input (Q6 & Q7), and outputs (Q6 & Q7).
#TBD
#TBD
#TBD
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| '''Read''' Chapter 3
| '''Read''' Chapter 3

Revision as of 20:06, 2 June 2013

Summer Bioinformatics Biology (BIOL 470.83/790.86, Spring 2013)
Instructors: Che Martin & Slav Kendal
Room:1000G HN (10th Floor, North Building
Hours: Tues & Thur 11:30 am-15:00
Office Hours: Room 830 HN; Tuesday 3-5pm or by appointment
Contacts: Mr Martin: cmartin@gc.cuny.edu; Mr Kendal: skendall@hunter.cuny.edu

Course Description

Background

Biomedical research is becoming a high-throughput science. As a result, information technology plays an increasingly important role in biomedical discovery. Bioinformatics is a new interdisciplinary field formed by the merging of molecular biology and computer science techniques.Today’s biology students must therefore not only learn to perform in vivo and invitro, but also in silico research skills. Quantitative/computational biologists are expected to be in increasing demand in the 21st century.

However, the technical barrier to enter the field and perform basic research projects in a bioinformatics lab is daunting for most undergraduate students. This is mainly due to the multidisciplinary nature of quantitative biology, which requires understandings and skills in chemistry, biology, computer programming, and statistics. The Hunter Summer Bioinformatics Workshop aims to introduce bioinformatics to motivated undergraduate and high school students by lowering the barrier and dispensing the usual pre-requisites in advanced biology/chemistry courses as well as entry-level programming/statistics courses. The Workshop does not assume prior programming experience.

The workshop DOES NOT

  • Replace existing advanced bioinformatics courses such as BIOL425 and STAT 319
  • Teach advanced bioinformatics programming skills (e.g., advanced data structure, object-oriented Perl, BioPerl, or relational database with SQL), which are the contents of BIOL425
  • Teach in-depth statistics or the popular R statistical package, although probabilistic thinking (e.g., distributions of a random variable, stochastic processes, likelihood, clustering analysis) is at the core of all bioinformatics analysis (STAT 319 teaches these topics)

To learn these advanced bioinformatics topics and skills, motivated students are encouraged to enroll in one of the Five Bioinformatics Concentrations of at Hunter. The QuBi program prepares the students for bioinformatics positions in a research lab or a biotechnology company.

Contents

This course will introduce both bioinformatics theories and practices. Topics include: database searching, sequence alignment, and basic molecular phylogenetics. The course is held in a UNIX-based instructional lab specifically configured for bioinformatics applications. Each session consists of a first-half instruction on bioinformatics theories and a second-half session of hands-on exercises.

Learning Goals

Students are expected to be able to:

  • Approach biological questions evolutionarily ("Tree-thinking")
  • Design efficient procedures to solve problems ("Algorithm-thinking")
  • Manipulate high-volume textual data using UNIX tools, Perl and Relational Database ("Data Visualization")

Textbook

St.Clair& Visick, (2010). Exploring Bioinformatics: a Project-Based Approach. Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Sudbury, Massachusetts, Inc. (ISBN 0-978-7637-5829-5)

This book should be available through several popular retailers and resellers online.

Grading & Academic Honesty

Hunter College regards acts of academic dishonesty (e.g., plagiarism, cheating on examinations, obtaining unfair advantage, and falsification of records and official documents) as serious offenses against the values of intellectual honesty. The College is committed to enforcing the CUNY Policy on Academic Integrity and will pursue cases of academic dishonesty according to the Hunter College Academic Integrity Procedures.

Student performance will be evaluated by weekly assignments and projects. While these are take-home projects and students are allowed to work in groups, students are expected to compose the final short answers, computer commands, and code independently. There are virtually an unlimited number of ways to solve a computational problem, as are ways and personal styles to implement an algorithm. Writings and blocks of codes that are virtually exact copies between individual students will be investigated as possible cases of plagiarism (e.g., copies from the Internet, text book, or each other). In such a case, the instructor will hold closed-door exams for involved individuals. Zero credits will be given to ALL involved individuals if the instructor considers there is enough evidence for plagiarism. To avoid being investigated for plagiarism, Do Not Copy from Others & Do Not Let Others Copy Your Work.

The grading scheme for the course, is as follows (Subject to some change. You will be notified with sufficient time):

  • Assignments (50%): 6 exercises (10 points each).
  • Final exam (40%)
    • Bioinformatics terminology and concepts (10 pts)
    • Use of web-based Bioinformatics databases (e.g., NCBI) and tools (e.g., BLAST, CLUSTALW, PHYLIP, ORF-Finder) (15 pts)
    • Ability to interpret an algorithm and its Perl implementations (15 pts)
  • Classroom Q & A (5%): Read the chapters before lecture.
  • Attendance (5%): 1-2 absences = -2.5%. More than 2 = -5%.
  • Email help: Include course code ("BIOL470", or "BIOL790") in the subject line

Programming Assignment Expectations

All code must begin with the lines in the Perl slides, without exception. For each assignment, unless otherwise stated, I would like the full text of the source code. Since you cannot print using the text editor in the lab (even if you are connected from home), you must copy and paste the code into a word processor or a local text editor. If you are using a word processor, change the font to a fixed-width/monospace font. On Windows, this is usually Courier.

Code indentation is your personal taste, so long as it is consistent and readable. Use comments whenever you think either the code is unclear, or simply as a guideline for yourself. Well-commented code improves readability, but be careful not overdo it.

Also, unless otherwise stated, both the input and the output of the program must be submitted as well. This should also be in fixed-width font, and you should label it in such a way so that I know it is the program's input/output. This is so that I know that you've run the program, what data you have used, and what the program produced.

If you are working from the lab, one option is to email the code to yourself, change the font, and then print it somewhere else as there is no printer in the lab.

Course Schedule (Tuesdays and Thursdays)

Dates and assignments below are subject to some change

"Lecture slides" links will be available either during or before each lecture, in PDF.

Homework assignments are due the week *after* the date under which they appear. ie, an assignment posted under June 4 is due the following lecture, on June 6.

June 4

  • Course Overview
  • Scope of Bioinformatics (Chapter 1)[Lecture Slides]
  • Tutorial: UNIX Account, Tools, & Emacs
  • Workshop 1:
    • Intro to UNIX
    • Program editors
    • first basic program

June 6

  • Chapter 2. Central Dogma & Molecular Biology terms [Lecture Slides Ch.2]
  • Workshop 2:
    • Linux tutorial
    • Basic Perl (Appendix B1 & B2, pg.310-318)
    • Algorithm 2: Transcription

June 11

  • Chapter 2. Central Dogma & Molecular Biology (continued) [Lecture Slides Ch.2]
  • Workshop 3:
    • Perl (Appendix B3 & B4, pg. 318-322)
    • Algorithm 3: Translation

June 13

  • Chapter 3. NCBI Databases/Tools; Gene alignments [Lecture Slides Ch.3]
  • Workshop 4:
    • Web Exploration (pg.60-66)
    • Algorithm 3: Translation

June 18

  • Chapter 6. Gene Prediction [Lecture Slides Ch.6]
  • Workshop 5:
    • Web Exploration (pg.168-174)
    • Algorithm 3: TBD

June 20

  • Chapter 8. Molecular Phylogenetics [Lecture Slides Ch.8]
  • Workshop 6:
    • Web Exploration (pg.244-248)
    • Algorithm 4: TBD

June 25

  • Chapter 8. Molecular Phylogenetics (continued) [Lecture Slides Ch.8]
  • Begin Review
    • Begin Algorithm Review

June 27

  • Review for final

July 2

  • Final Exam