The processes of life are naturally dynamic in space and time from the atomic to the organismal level. The rapid development of imaging methods across this full scale of biological organisation is revolutionising our ability to visualise the inner workings of proteins, protein complexes, organelles, cells, tissues, organs and whole organisms. Being able to see biological processes unfold in real time allows us to understand the mechanism of life as well as disease.
The symposium will bring together the leading developers of imaging methods with cutting edge applications that illustrate how imaging can answer biological questions. We will place emphasis on methods that are able to capture the dynamics of life, spanning the whole range from molecular resolution to imaging of whole organisms. Everybody interested in the latest imaging technologies and their applications in the life sciences should attend. The symposium provides many opportunities for presentations, discussions and interactions between students, postdocs, junior as well as senior investigators.
LOCATION & DATES
EMBL Heidelberg, Germany
9 - 12 Oct 2019
Website: https://www.embo-embl-symposia.org/symposia/2019/EES19-09/
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We believe that this post does not fit the main topic of this site.
Not bioinformatics-related.
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EDIT: Reopened following the below comments.
I believe this is a bit strict to close this.
I agree. I consider bioimaging to be relevant to, if not part of, bioinformatics since many omics approaches are now either combined with imaging (e.g. mass-spectrometry imaging or using imaging (e.g. single molecule FISH transcriptomics).