I plan to apply for PhD candidate or master student in bioinformatics field.
I wonder what the big questions in bioinformatics field nowadays are.
I want to do something which maybe help push the bioinformatics forward. Please give me some clues or tips.
"IS IT ZERO OR ONE-BASED ?" :-)
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A problem for clinical bioinformaticians: 3) Can I get first authorship considering I am not an MD?
Personally I think that bioinformatics will be largely pushed forward after solving this problem:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P_versus_NP_problem
(discussed here https://biology.stackexchange.com/questions/16621/list-of-np-hard-problems-in-biology-bioinformatics )
You mention P versus NP problem. Is it an even too big question for bioinformatics which is a specialized field other than computer science or math science? Are there any specific topics in bioinformatics and more related to biology or human? Maybe I am too "low" for you. Anyway, thank you for your response.
You should add some details. Bioinformatics is an extensive field. Are you more into data analysis, so want to work ona biological problem or are you more a programmer and want to develop a new tool, or rather very much into developing new analysis strategies?
I am very glad that you can question me. I want to share some feeling with you guys. I cannot see the questions or difficulties in bioinformatics. Can you feel what I am talking? For example, if someone want to get a whole genome sequence of some organism, he can actually get it, though it cost some more money or time. I want to know what the real questions the scientists are tackling with in bioinformatics. Maybe I am too little experienced, so I look like a fool.
Well, that shows how much you know about the field.
I understand the field is quite vast for a beginner.
I suggest you check on some "big shots" in the field and their research topics, usually you can find their current interests on their websites. Being not academic, my interests are far less basic, so I'm not a big help in identification of those key persons, but there's some institutes like EBI, EMBL, NCBI, JGI, etc. or journals like Nature Methods (filter on bioinformatics), Bioinformatics.
In the end, the importance of a (research) question can be relatively subjective and/or a matter of fluctuating trends, with the exceptions of some really fundamental problems, like for example German's example above...
if it would only be that simple!
But unfortunately it is not, which also kinda illustrates that a decent background in the topic/field is crucial to ask the "correct/good" questions.
No, I also provided the list of topics that will largely benefit from solving this problem (such as multiple sequence alignment or genome assembly). It is directly related to biology and for humans too. Also Network Inference (finding relationships between genes) is a NP-hard problem. Non-Negative Matrix Factorization is, I believe, NP-hard, and it is widely used in e.g. cancer signatures determination. Drug design and protein modelling is NP-hard.
This problem is indeed big, but that's what you've asked.
If the problem is too big for you, you may concentrate on finding approximate solutions for NP-hard problems in reasonable time.