Brown Bag Lunch: Sketch Your Proposal – Nicholas Coombs
Come join us for Nicholas Coomb’s sketch your proposal where we’ll be getting ideas out in the open and on the board. Come in with an idea, leave with a proposal at this SYP Brown Bag Lunch.
Come join us for Nicholas Coomb’s sketch your proposal where we’ll be getting ideas out in the open and on the board. Come in with an idea, leave with a proposal at this SYP Brown Bag Lunch.
Come say farewell to Racquel and celebrate her amazing commitment to the modeling core before she departs later this month! Also, we have an urgent emergency gathering of IDAC, same place same time. We strongly advise those associated (and are available) to attend! This session will be led by Holly. All are welcome!
We’d like to remind you of our upcoming Brown Bag Lunch happening Monday, January 26 from 12:30-1:30pm in the Collaboratorium (IRIC 352). IMCI will have a special BBL for people interested in applying to our Pilot Project program. If you are considering applying to this Pilot Project program, we strongly encourage you to come to this lunch prepared to give a…
Please come join us for a special workshop happening Wednesday, April 29, from 12:30-1:30 PM, in the Collaboratorium (IRIC 352) when IMCI will host a co-sponsored event with COBRE in Nutrition & Women’s Health. Titled: A Practical Guide to Unlocking Nutrition & Health Databases for Research,Léa Dussurget & Dr. Janet Williams will provide an introductory workshop on data access and extraction…
Come join the Writing Working Group on Tuesdays @1:30-4:30pm in the Collaboratorium (IRIC 352) for a consistent and accountable time and place to write!
Faced with a lethal stress, microbial populations must either evolve genetic resistance or die, right? For Methylobacterium extorquens, lethal levels of the toxic metabolic intermediate formaldehyde can select for mutants beneficial in this environment, but we have also found that they can survive via epigenetic inheritance. This occurs at much higher rates and can be passed…
This talk explores Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae, a bacterium that rarely causes respiratory disease in domestic sheep and goats but poses a deadly threat to their wild counterparts. When domestic herds come in contact with bighorn sheep, the pathogen can spread, leading to severe pneumonia outbreaks impacting wild populations.