
QCB
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Genotype Inference
Genomics Grid Computing
QERPs (QCB Evening Research Presentations) is a QCB research colloquium that has been developed for first year QCB graduate students, held on Thursday evenings during the fall term. The colloquium will give students an opportunity to hear about the work our faculty are doing, and is intended to help students with their lab rotation decisions. Students will also get the chance to enhance their skills of orally presenting scientific material to an audience by giving presentations in two distinct formats. One presentation will be on a paper written by a future QCB seminar speaker and the second will be on the students' lab rotation experiences. To complete this requirement, students must attend the weekly QCB seminar series .
Graduate Program in Quantitative and Computational Biology - Courses
Understanding behavior at all levels of function, from systems to cells, is one of the great challenges of modern biology. At Princeton University, faculty with research interests in neuroscience can be found in many departments, including Applied Math, Chemistry, Engineering, Molecular Biology, Physics, Philosophy and Psychology. This diversity mirrors the interdisciplinary nature of contemporary neuroscience research and provides a rich set of opportunities for research and training in neuroscience. This web site provides information about the shared and individual interests of neuroscience faculty at Princeton, the opportunities available for training at the graduate and undergraduate levels, and neuroscience-related activities on campus.
Neuroscience Institute
Welcome to the website of the Department of Computer Science at Princeton University. Princeton has been at the forefront of computing since Alan Turing, Alonzo Church and John von Neumann were among its residents. The Department has experienced significant growth over the last few years, and is now home to 30 faculty, with strong groups in theory, systems, graphics/media, programming languages, computational science, security, AI, and computational biology.
Computer Science Department at Princeton University
University - Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
physics
Neuroscience
chemistry

