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Gusfield received his undergraduate degree in computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1973, [citation needed] his Master of Science degree in computer science from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in 1975, [citation needed] and his Ph.D. in engineering science from Berkeley in 1980; [3] his doctoral advisor was Richard Karp.
Pachter was with the University of California, Berkeley faculty from 1999 to 2018 [7] and was given the Sackler Chair in 2012. [4]As well as for his technical contributions, Pachter is known for using new media to promote open science [8] and for a thought experiment he posted on his blog according to which 'the nearest neighbor to the "perfect human"' is from Puerto Rico. [9]
QB3 has more than 250 faculty affiliates, roughly 100 each from Berkeley, UCSF, and UC Santa Cruz. [10] [11] The research interests of these faculty fall under the umbrella of the quantitative biosciences. QB3 scientists tend to be bioengineers, biophysicists, or pharmaceutical or computational biologists. Synthetic biology is strongly represented.
Michael Bruce Eisen (born April 13, 1967) is an American computational biologist and the former [2] editor-in-chief of the journal eLife. [3] He is a professor of genetics, genomics and development at University of California, Berkeley.
Rao's research focuses on computational biology, graph partitioning, and single- and multi-commodity flows (maximum flow problem). [4]Rao is an ACM Fellow (2013) [5] and won the Fulkerson Prize with Sanjeev Arora and Umesh Vazirani in 2012 for their work on improving the approximation ratio for graph separators and related problems from () to ().
Baker received a Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in biology from Harvard University in 1984. He then joined the laboratory of Randy Schekman , where he worked primarily on protein transport and trafficking in yeast, and obtained a Doctor of Philosophy in biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1989. [ 9 ]
His research is focused on understanding the origin, evolution, and diversity of animals by combining computational genome analysis with comparative developmental biology. Rokhsar received his Ph.D. in theoretical physics from Cornell University with doctoral advisors N. David Mermin and James Sethna, [4] and joined the Berkeley faculty in 1989 ...
Mark Berger, B.A. 1964 – recipient of four Academy Awards for sound mixing and adjunct professor at UC Berkeley [58]; John Dykstra – staff researcher (c. 1973–1975) at UC Berkeley's Institute of Urban and Regional Development, which developed computer-controlled cameras and associated technologies that were later adapted for the groundbreaking special effects in Star Wars and later films ...