Dynamic modeling and statistical inference in the life sciences: philosophical and practical perspectives

Fecha: Mié, Nov 23 - Vie, Nov 25 2022

Hora: 14:00

Ubicación: Maryam Mirzakhani Seminar Room at BCAM Conference room 1 at Biofisika Center Online

Ponentes: Johannes Jaeger (Complexity Science Hub), Veronica Grieneisen (Cardiff University), Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo and Jose M.G. Vilar (Biofisika Institutua - UPV/EHU), Ivan Coluzza (BCMaterials), Daniele De Martino (Biofisika Institutua), Miguel Aguilera and ,Caetano

DATES: 23 - 25 November 2022 (3 sessions)
TIME: 14:00-18:00 (a total of 12 hours)
LOCATION:
Maryam Mirzakhani Seminar Room at BCAM
Conference room 1 at Biofisika Center
Online

Organizers
 

Main organizer: Caetano Souto-Maior (BCAM);
Coorganizers: Daniele De Martino (Biofisika Institutua), Miguel Aguilera (BCAM)

 

Speakers
 

Johannes Jaeger (Complexity Science Hub, Austria)
Veronica Grieneisen (Cardiff University, UK)
Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo (Biofisika Institutua, UPV/EHU)
Jose M.G. Vilar (Biofisika Institutua, UPV/EHU)
Ivan Coluzza (BCMaterials)
Daniele De Martino (Biofisika Institutua)
Miguel Aguilera (BCAM)
Caetano Souto-Maior (BCAM)

 

Description
 

Mathematical modeling of living systems brings together the exact and life sciences, borrowing from everything in between and dragging in several disciplines: mathematics, statistics and machine learning, physics, chemistry, complex systems, bioinformatics, experimental design, genomics, systems biology, molecular biology, as well as the interfaces between them.

This complex multidisciplinarity has several implications from the perspective of research programs and training of scientists: it is usually impossible to fit the science into a well-defined field with experts trained in of its aspects. This observation begs the philosophical question: How to go about studying highly complex systems at a multidimensional interface of fields?

The objective of this course is twofold:


  • To present a historical and philosophical perspective of modeling life as something that requires thinking about how living systems are built and how we describe them;

  • Introduce formulations (e.g. dynamic models), frameworks (e.g. Bayesian inference; data treatment), tools (e.g. Python/R packages), and approaches (e.g. understanding some types of experimentation or observation; designing experiments) that allow scientists anywhere in the Mathmematics-Biology spectrum (including the extremes) to practice model-based inference of living systems.



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  • This audience in this course ranges from bench biologists interested in using mathematical models, to mathematicians or statisticians interested in getting involved in the design of experiments for a truly collaborative and applied mathematics. The course is ideal for Early-Career Researchers (students and early postdocs), but also later-career investigators who would like to expand their scientific perspectives.



Prerequisites
 

For all participants, the only requisite for this course is being interested in interdisciplinary research along the Mathematics-Biology axis. For researchers with a PhD an additional recommendation is having some tolerance for being outside of your comfort zone.
 

Travel grants
 

Two (2) travel grants are available to participants who would like to attend in person, do not reside in the area, and cannot cover the costs of travel and accommodations. Participants interested should write a 1-2(max) paragraph justification for their request. Award will be judged on the basis of (i) financial need [no specific funding for this purpose], (ii) stage of career [earlier career researchers will be prioritized], (iii) general interest and fit [this criterion will be used only as a a tie breaker if i and ii are equivalent].
 

Contact And Program Updates


For any questions please contact Caetano Souto Maior, contact information can be found at the BCAM website, for further information, the course schedule, and the latest updates please check the course web page.
 

PROGRAM

 

Day 1 (BCAM)

 


  • 14:00-14:20 - Introduction: Hypothesis-Driven, Data-Driven, and Reality-Driven Research, Caetano Souto Maior (BCAM)

  • 14:20-14:40 - Examples where mathematical modelling is worth a Nobel prize in life sciences, Daniele De Martino (Biofisika Institutua)

  • 14:40-15:20 - Seminar: Dynamics-informed characterization of molecular, cellular, and population mechanisms, Jose Vilar (Biofisika Institutua)

  • 15:20-15:40 - Break (20 minutes)

  • 15:40-16:30 - Seminar: Systems Biology of Morphogenesis: From modelling networks to shape, Veronica Grieneisen (Cardiff University, UK)

  • 16:30-16:50 - Break (20 minutes)

  • 16:50-17:30 - Talk: Modelling the origins of biological complexity: protocells 'in vitro', 'in silico' and 'in charta" - Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo (Biofisika Institutua)

  • 17:30-18:00 - General discussion



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Day 2 (Biofisika)

 


  • 14:00-14:30 - From the Lab to the Vector Field: essentials of multidisciplinary research programs, Caetano Souto Maior (BCAM)

  • 14:30-15:00 - Measuring, inference and modelling: an example from single cell metabolism , Daniele De Martino (Biofisika Institutua)

  • 15:00-15:20 - Break (20 minutes)

  • 15:20-15:40  Seminar: Proteins as inspiration for smart materials: insights from modeling, - Ivan Coluzza BCMaterials)

  • 16:00-16:20 - Break (20 minutes)

  • 16:20-17:20 - Interactive Tutorial: Maximum entropy model inference for biological networks, Miguel Aguilera (BCAM)

  • 17:20-17:45 - General discussion



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Day 3 (BCAM)

 


  • 14:00-14:30 - In practice, theory works differently: Why is process-oriented multidisciplinary research hard?, Caetano Souto Maior (BCAM)

  • 14:30-15:10 - BYOP (Bring Your Own Problem): short talks on what makes your research challenging (5-10 minute talks)

  • 15:10-15:30 - Break (20 minutes)

  • 15:30-16:20 - Seminar: Writing Your Own Rules: Mathematical Modeling Challenges in Organismic Systems, Johannes Jaeger (Complexity Science Hub, Austria)

  • 16:20-16:40 - Break (20 minutes)

  • 16:40-17:20 - General discussion: What are we really trying to achieve in science and what's the best way to get there?

  • 17:30-17:30 - Concluding remarks



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*Registration is free, but mandatory before 18 November 2022. To sign-up go to https://forms.gle/W8TWtJjruX6NkUuQ6 and fill the registration form

 

Organizadores:

BCAM

Ponentes confirmados:

Johannes Jaeger (Complexity Science Hub), Veronica Grieneisen (Cardiff University), Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo and Jose M.G. Vilar (Biofisika Institutua - UPV/EHU), Ivan Coluzza (BCMaterials), Daniele De Martino (Biofisika Institutua), Miguel Aguilera and ,Caetano