Quantitative Methods for Bioimaging
4th-5th July 2019
Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London
South Kensington, London
Biomaging (imaging as applied to cellular biology) is a vital tool used across the life sciences for observing cellular structures and processes. It plays a major role in the understanding of diseases and infections and in the development of new drugs and treatments.
Chemists, physicists, biophysicists and engineers are driving forward revolutionary advances in imaging and experimental techniques, allowing cellular processes and structures to be observed in unprecedented detail. The bioimaging community is producing vast quantities of data, creating an urgency for the quantitative methods needed to exploit them to their full potential and effectively draw inference upon the very biological mechanisms the technology has been developed to probe.
This workshop will feature invited and contributed talks exploring state of the art methods for the quantitative analysis of bioimaging data. Topics covered will include machine learning, spatial statistics, clustering, correlative imaging, tracking and statistical signal processing.
Registration is now open and places are limited.
Full details, including a full list of speakers and how to register can be found at
http://wwwf.imperial.ac.uk/~eakc07/events/QMB2019/
This event is funded in part by the Quantitative Sciences Research Institute<http://www.imperial.ac.uk/quantitative-sciences-institute/>.
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