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Ilya is in charge of the Image
Informatics and Computational Biology Unit at the
National Institute on Aging (part of NIH).
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Josiah Johnston is part of Ilya's lab at the National
Institute on Aging (part of NIH). I got a B.S. in Computer
Science from the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
Technical interests include working with ontologies, data
modeling, and machine learning. Professionally, I'm
interested in developing technologies with positive social
and economic implications on both local and global scales.
OME technologies hold high promise of medical costs through
computer assisted diagnosis, and reducing the price of
medicines by making novel drug discovery cheap and easy. In
my free time, I work towards peace, social justice, and community development.
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Tom Macura is a Doctoral student in the Computer
Laboratory at the University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
as a member of Trinity College. His undergraduate degrees
are in Mathematics and Computer Science, from the
University of Maryland, Baltimore County. His
professional interests are Image Analysis, Machine
Learning, and Content Based Image Retrieval of biological
images. His appointment at the National Institute on
Aging, Laboratory of Genetics, Image Informatics and
Computational Biology Unit that is headed by Dr. Ilya
G. Goldberg is as a NIH-Cambridge Scholar.
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Nikita is part of Ilya's lab at the National Institute on
Aging (part of NIH).
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Past OME developers in the Goldberg Lab: |
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Harry Hochheiser was a post-doctoral researcher in the
Goldberg Lab from 2003-2006. He is now an Assistant
Professor of Computer
Science at Towson
University, where he continues to work on OME,
Bioinformatics, Human-Computer Interactionk,
Information Visualization, and the social
implications of computing technologies.
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