Researchers at UW-Madison’s School of Medicine and Public Health (UWSMPH) received a $150 million grant from the National Institutes of Health for a study into Alzheimer’s disease.
We are pleased to announce this Research Topic: Open and Reproducible science developed in collaboration with the 8th Annual Conference of Arkansas Bioinformatics Consortium (AR-BIC2022). Established in 2014, the Arkansas Bioinformatics Consortium (AR-BIC) has consistently facilitated thoughtful communication and collaboration, with an annual conference that attracts more than 200 attendees and features the voices of experts in data science, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), computational biology, and bioinformatics. Specifically, this Research Topic in alignment with the AR-BIC 2022 theme will provide a forum to discuss open and reproducible science, novel methodological developments, and No Boundary Thinking (NBT) facilitated by data science, AI, ML, computational biology, and bioinformatics. Science is now data-intensive, computationally demanding, and requires the integration and synthesis of information and knowledge from several disciplines. The data-driven, co