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Welcome,
Biocomplexity is the study of the complex structures and behaviors that
arise from the interaction of biological entities (molecules, cells, or
organisms). While physical and chemical processes give rise to a great
variety of spatial and temporal structures, the complexity of even the
simplest biological phenomena is infinitely richer.
The goal of the center is to meld physical, mathematical, and computational
approaches with those of modern biology to understand this complexity
in a quantitative and predictive way.
December
2003 Issue of The Biological Physicist, ICSB Profile (pdf)
(Left to Right)
Scott Christley, Gennady Margolin - Postdoctoral Associate, Richard Gejji, Dustin VonHandorf, Trevor Cickovski, Matt Rissler, Ivan Gregoretti, Olga Sozinova - Postdoctoral Associate, Mark Alber - Notre Dame Chair in Applied Mathematics, Jesús A. Izaguirre - Associate Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, Tanya Kazakova, Bei Hu - Professor of Mathematics, Nan Chen - Postdoctoral Associate, Fang Qi, Jianfeng Zhu, Yilin Wu
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