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|[[Image:Pear.png|left|The Bosc Pear]]
 
|[[Image:Pear.png|left|The Bosc Pear]]
 
|
 
|
|The 14th Annual Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC 2013) will take place July 19-20, 2013, in Berlin, Germany, right before [http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 ISMB/ECCB 2013].
+
|The 14th Annual Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC 2013) took place July 19-20, 2013, in Berlin, Germany, right before [http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 ISMB/ECCB 2013].
 +
The '''[[BOSC_2013_Schedule|conference schedule is available here as HTML]]''' (including links to presentations) and '''[[Media:BOSC2013_schedule.pdf | here as a PDF file]]''' (A4 format).
 +
The '''[http://www.open-bio.org/bosc2013/BOSC2013-program.pdf complete program]''', including all accepted talk and poster abstracts, is '''[http://www.open-bio.org/bosc2013/BOSC2013-program.pdf here]'''.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Conference report preprint: [https://peerj.com/preprints/83/ Harris et al. (2013) The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) 2013. PeerJ PrePrints 1:e83v1]; abridged formal report: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btu413 Harris et al. (2014) The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) 2013. Bioinformatics (in press)]
 +
|}
  
 
== Important Dates ==
 
== Important Dates ==
  
* March 12, 2103: [[#Submitting_Abstracts|Abstract submission]] opens
 
* April 7-8, 2013: [http://www.broadinstitute.org/events/interoperability-hackathon-2013/home BOSC/Broad Interoperability Hackathon], Cambridge, MA. '''(Free event--sign up now!)'''
 
* April 12, 2013: BOSC abstracts due
 
 
* July 17-18, 2013: [[Codefest 2013]], Berlin
 
* July 17-18, 2013: [[Codefest 2013]], Berlin
* July 19-20, 2013: '''BOSC 2013''', Berlin
+
* July 19-20, 2013: '''BOSC 2013''', ICC Berlin, Berlin -- '''[[BOSC_2013_Schedule|schedule]]'''
* July 19-23, 2013: [http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 ISMB/ECCB 2013],  
+
* July 19-23, 2013: [http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 ISMB/ECCB 2013], ICC Berlin, Berlin
|}
+
* July 11-12, 2014: [[BOSC 2014]], Boston, MA
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
  
The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) is a satellite of [http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 ISMB]. It is sponsored by the Open Bioinformatics Foundation (O|B|F), a non-profit group dedicated to promoting the practice and philosophy of Open Source software development within the biological research community.  
+
The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) is a two-day Special Interest Group of [http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 ISMB]. It is sponsored by the Open Bioinformatics Foundation (OBF), a non-profit group dedicated to promoting the practice and philosophy of Open Source software development within the biological research community.  
  
 
Open Source software has flourished in the bioinformatics community for well over a decade. When the first BOSC (Bioinformatics Open Source Conference) was held in 2000, there were already a number of popular open source bioinformatics packages, and the number and range of these projects has increased dramatically since then. BOSC covers the wide range of open source bioinformatics software packages that have been successfully developed and adopted by the community, and encompasses the growing movement of Open Science, with its focus on transparency, reproducibility, and data provenance. We welcome submissions relating to all aspects of open source bioinformatics software and open science, including new computational methods, reusable software components, visualization, interoperability, and other approaches that help to advance research in the biomolecular sciences. Two full days of talks, posters, panel discussions, and informal discussion groups will enable BOSC attendees to interact with other developers and share ideas and code, as well as learning about some of the latest developments in the field of open source bioinformatics.
 
Open Source software has flourished in the bioinformatics community for well over a decade. When the first BOSC (Bioinformatics Open Source Conference) was held in 2000, there were already a number of popular open source bioinformatics packages, and the number and range of these projects has increased dramatically since then. BOSC covers the wide range of open source bioinformatics software packages that have been successfully developed and adopted by the community, and encompasses the growing movement of Open Science, with its focus on transparency, reproducibility, and data provenance. We welcome submissions relating to all aspects of open source bioinformatics software and open science, including new computational methods, reusable software components, visualization, interoperability, and other approaches that help to advance research in the biomolecular sciences. Two full days of talks, posters, panel discussions, and informal discussion groups will enable BOSC attendees to interact with other developers and share ideas and code, as well as learning about some of the latest developments in the field of open source bioinformatics.
  
Please spread the word about BOSC--all are welcome. On Twitter, follow @BOSC2013 and use hash tag #bosc2013.
+
Please spread the word about BOSC--all are welcome. On Twitter, [https://twitter.com/OBF_BOSC follow @OBF_BOSC] and use [https://twitter.com/search?q=%23BOSC2013 hash tag #bosc2013].
  
 
== Keynote Speakers ==
 
== Keynote Speakers ==
 +
This year's keynote speakers will be Sean Eddy of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Janelia Farm, and Cameron Neylon of the Public Library of Science.
  
=== Sean Eddy ===
+
[[Image:SeanEddy.jpg|150px|Sean Eddy]]
Sean Eddy is a group leader at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's
+
[[Image:Neylon.jpg|90px|Cameron Neylon]]
Janelia Farm. He is interested in deciphering the evolutionary history
+
[[BOSC_Keynote_Speakers|More information about BOSC 2013 Keynote Speakers]]
of life by comparison of genomic DNA sequences. His expertise is in
 
the development of computational algorithms and software tools for
 
biological sequence analysis. He is the author of several
 
computational tools for sequence analysis including the HMMER and
 
Infernal software suites, as well as a coauthor of the Pfam database
 
of protein domains. He serves as an advisor to several foundations and
 
US science agencies, including the National Institutes of Health and
 
the National Academy of Sciences, often on matters of large-scale
 
computation and data analysis in biology.
 
  
Sean's talk is entitled ''Biological sequence analysis in the post-data era''.
+
== Session Topics ==
[[Image:SeanEddy.jpg|210px|left|Sean Eddy]]
 
:Biological systems are almost unfathomably complex, yet their complexity is reproducibly specified by a small digital genome. We understand many basics of development and evolution but we lack a truly satisfying quantitative understanding of how biological complexity is specified and how it evolves. One important line of attack on the problem is to reconstruct the history of molecular evolution by comparative genome sequence analysis. Biological sequence comparison has a long intellectual history, but only recently, with the advent of inexpensive large scale DNA sequencing, have we gained comprehensive access to genome sequences from essentially all species. Though welcome, this influx of genome sequence data is exposing structural flaws in computational biology research tools. Because the research community values innovative science over infrastructure in any short-term decision, academic researchers have difficulty investing sufficient effort in robust software and datasets that may enable even more innovative science over the long term. Meanwhile, professional commercialization of the software and data infrastructure also continues to prove difficult, in part because open source code and data availability is a fundamental principle of scientific publication of reproducible, reusable results. I'll discuss what I see as some of the key tensions, challenges, and opportunities in these regard, in part in the context of our work at Janelia Farm on the HMMER and Infernal codebases, and our nascent work on the genomic specification of neural circuits in Drosophila.
 
 
 
[[Image:Neylon.jpg|120px|left|Cameron Neylon]]
 
 
 
=== Cameron Neylon ===
 
 
 
Cameron Neylon is Advocacy Director for the Public Library of Science, a research biophysicist and well known agitator for opening up the process of research. He speaks regularly on issues of Open Science including Open Access publication, Open Data, and Open Source as well as the wider technical and social issues of applying the opportunities the internet brings to the practice of science. He was named as a SPARC Innovator in July 2010 for work on the Panton Principles and is a recipient of the Blue Obelisk for contributions to open data. He writes regularly at his blog, [http://cameronneylon.net/ Science in the Open].
 
 
 
Cameron will speak about ''Network ready research: The role of open source and open thinking'':
 
 
 
The highest principle of network architecture design is interoperability. If Metcalfe's Law tells us that a network's value can scale as some exponent of the number of connections then our job in building networks is to ensure that those connections are as numerous, as operational, and as easy to create as possible. Where we make it easy for anyone to wire in new connections we maximise the ability of others to contribute to the value of our shared networks.
 
 
 
Bioinformatics has, from time to time, been derided as "slidedecks full of hairballs", yet those hairballs, and their ubiquity are emblematic of the fact that at its heart bioinformatics is a science of networks. Networks of physical interactions, of genetic control, of degree of similarity, or of ecological interactions amongst many others. Bioinformatics is also amongst the most networked of research communities and amongst the most open in the sharing of research papers, of research data, tools, and even research in process in online conversations and writing.
 
 
 
Lifting our gaze from the networks we work on to the networks we occupy is a challenge. Our human networks are messy and contingent and our machine networks clogged with things we can't use, even if we could access them. What principles can we apply so as to build our research into networks that make the most of the network infrastructure we have around us. Where are the pitfalls opportunities? And where are the opportunities? What will it take to configure our work so as to enable "network ready research"?
 
  
== Session Topics ==
+
The conference schedule is available '''[[BOSC_2013_Schedule|here as HTML]]''' and '''[[Media:BOSC2013_schedule.pdf | here as a PDF file]]''', including [[BOSC_2013/BOFs|Birds of a Feather (BoF) meetings]].
  
* Open Science and Reproducible Research -- New this year, this session encompasses the theory and practice of open science, including open notebook science, open data, transparent and reproducible workflows, and shared standards for reviewing and publishing research papers.
+
* '''Open Science and Reproducible Research''' -- New this year, this session encompasses the theory and practice of open science, including open notebook science, open data, transparent and reproducible workflows, and shared standards for reviewing and publishing research papers.
* Cloud and Parallel Computing -- This session focuses on approaches that use cloud and other massively parallel infrastructures for processing and analyzing large and heterogeneous biological data. We are particularly interested in solutions demonstrating how to build new or extend existing software, resources and workflows to perform at scale for "Big Data" problems.
+
* '''Cloud and Parallel Computing''' -- This session focuses on approaches that use cloud and other massively parallel infrastructures for processing and analyzing large and heterogeneous biological data. We are particularly interested in solutions demonstrating how to build new or extend existing software, resources and workflows to perform at scale for "Big Data" problems.
* Genome-scale Data Management -- This session encompasses software and other tools designed for managing, exploring, and analyzing genome-level data to address research questions, including but not limited to genome assembly, variant prediction, eQTL analysis, and phylogenomic methods.
+
* '''Genome-scale Data Management''' -- This session encompasses software and other tools designed for managing, exploring, and analyzing genome-level data to address research questions, including but not limited to genome assembly, variant prediction, eQTL analysis, and phylogenomic methods.
* Visualization -- Current data acquisition technologies are moving us more and more towards a "data first, hypothesis later" paradigm for scientific research. As a result, data visualization and visual analytics are of increasing importance. This session focuses on approaches for interactive as well as static visual representations of biomedical data, ranging from exploration to explanation.
+
* '''Visualization''' -- Current data acquisition technologies are moving us more and more towards a "data first, hypothesis later" paradigm for scientific research. As a result, data visualization and visual analytics are of increasing importance. This session focuses on approaches for interactive as well as static visual representations of biomedical data, ranging from exploration to explanation.
* Software Interoperability -- This session covers Open Source approaches to integrating the latest bioinformatics tools. Building flexible, reproducible workflows with connected tools is essential to modern bioinformatics. The goal of this session is to investigate how we can increase tool connectivity and help communities work better together.
+
* '''Software Interoperability''' -- This session covers Open Source approaches to integrating the latest bioinformatics tools. Building flexible, reproducible workflows with connected tools is essential to modern bioinformatics. The goal of this session is to investigate how we can increase tool connectivity and help communities work better together.
* Translational Bioinformatics -- This session will explore applications of biological and medical informatics to the development of personalized healthcare, therapies, and a better understanding of human health and disease. Topics include the analysis of large scale population and family sequencing data, bioinformatics methodologies for clinical research, and tools for discovering clinically useful associations in human databases. We especially welcome work that bridges the gap between research and patients, making analysis tools available and understandable for non-scientists.
+
* '''Translational Bioinformatics''' -- This session will explore applications of biological and medical informatics to the development of personalized healthcare, therapies, and a better understanding of human health and disease. Topics include the analysis of large scale population and family sequencing data, bioinformatics methodologies for clinical research, and tools for discovering clinically useful associations in human databases. We especially welcome work that bridges the gap between research and patients, making analysis tools available and understandable for non-scientists.
* Bioinformatics Open Source Project Updates -- This session will feature short talks from ongoing projects describing their recent progress. Abstracts will be solicited from open source projects affiliated with the O|B|F (see http://www.open-bio.org/wiki/Projects), including the Bio* projects, DAS, BioMOBY, EMBOSS, and GMOD, but any other open-source project will be equally eligible to submit abstracts for this session.
+
* '''Bioinformatics Open Source Project Updates''' -- This session will feature short talks from ongoing projects describing their recent progress. Abstracts will be solicited from open source projects affiliated with the OBF (see http://www.open-bio.org/wiki/Projects), including the Bio* projects, DAS, BioMOBY, EMBOSS, and GMOD, but any other open-source project will be equally eligible to submit abstracts for this session.
* Panel (TBD)
+
* '''[[BOSC_Panel_2013|Panel: Strategies for funding and maintaining open source software]]'''
  
 
== Submitting Abstracts ==
 
== Submitting Abstracts ==
  
'''[http://events.open-bio.org/BOSC2013/openconf.php Submit your abstract here!]'''
+
The deadline for abstract submissions for talks was April 12, 2013. Late poster abstracts were accepted until June 7. We have reserved a few spaces for walk-in posters, which [[BOSC_Abstract_Submission|must meet the BOSC requirements of open source and recognized license]]. The ISMB staff specify that posters should not exceed the following dimensions: 0.95 m wide x 1.30 m high.
 
 
The deadline for abstract submissions is '''Friday, April 12, 2013'''. Abstracts must be '''one page''' in length and submitted '''as a PDF (preferred) or Microsoft Word file only'''.  Please observe the following formatting guidelines:
 
* Use 1 inch (2.5 cm) margins on the top, sides, and bottom of the page.
 
* Include the following pieces of information in order from the top of the page:
 
** Title
 
** Authors, with the presenting author's name underlined.
 
** Author affiliations, including the e-mail address of the presenting author.
 
** URL for the overall project web site
 
** URL for accessing the code
 
** The particular Open Source License being used
 
* The abstracts will be printed "as is" in the program booklet; please help your all-volunteer Organizing Committee by following the formatting guidelines above.
 
 
 
Accepted talks will be 5-20 minutes. You will be notified of the length of your talk upon abstract acceptance.
 
  
BOSC also includes poster sessions. If you want to present a poster and would like your poster abstract to be included in the BOSC program, please [http://events.open-bio.org/BOSC2013/openconf.php submit it] by June 4. There may be also an opportunity to submit last-minute abstracts for lightning talks, time permitting.
+
<div style="float:right; background-color: #FFFFFF">[[File:Eagle_logo_2013.jpg|120px|right|Eagle Genomics logo|link=http://www.eaglegenomics.com/]]</div>
 
 
To be considered for acceptance, software systems representing the central topic in a presentation submitted to BOSC must be licensed with a recognized Open Source License, and be freely available for download in source code form. Please see the next section for more information.
 
 
 
'''[http://events.open-bio.org/BOSC2013/openconf.php Submit your abstract here!]'''
 
 
 
== BOSC Open Source License Requirement ==
 
 
 
The [[OBF|Open Bioinformatics Foundation]], which sponsors BOSC, is dedicated to promoting the practice and philosophy of Open Source Software Development within the biological research community. For this reason, if a submitted talk proposal concerns a specific software system for use by the research community, then that software must be licensed with a recognized Open Source License, and be available for download, including source code, by a tar/zip file accessed through ftp/http or through a widely used version control system like cvs/subversion/git/bazaar/Mercurial.
 
 
 
See the following websites for further information:
 
* [http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ Recognized Open Source Licenses]
 
* [http://www.opensource.org/docs/definition.php Definition of the Open Source Philosophy]
 
 
 
<div style="float:right; background-color: #FFFFFF">[[File:Eagle_logo_2013.jpg‎|120px|right|Eagle Genomics logo|link=http://www.eaglegenomics.com/]]</div>
 
  
 
== Sponsor ==
 
== Sponsor ==
  
We thank [http://www.eaglegenomics.com/ Eagle Genomics, Ltd.] for sponsoring three Student Travel Awards at BOSC 2012. Each student winner will receive $250 towards travel expenses. In addition, the Open Bioinformatics Foundation will grant these three students free admission to the conference.
+
We thank [http://www.eaglegenomics.com/ Eagle Genomics, Ltd.] for helping to sponsor three Student Travel Awards at BOSC 2013. Each student winner will receive $250 towards travel expenses. In addition, the Open Bioinformatics Foundation will grant these three students free admission to the conference.
 
 
== Complementary Registration ==
 
In addition to the student awards, the Open Bioinformatics Foundation will offer free admission to several other people whose abstracts are accepted for talks. Please [mailto:bosc@open-bio.org send us a letter] explaining why you are seeking complimentary registration to attend BOSC. Decisions will be made by the BOSC organizing committee and announced on May 8, 2013.
 
  
 
== BOSC Organizing Committee ==
 
== BOSC Organizing Committee ==
Line 125: Line 74:
 
* [http://www.bioperl.org/wiki/Hilmar_Lapp Hilmar Lapp] (National Evolutionary Synthesis Center)
 
* [http://www.bioperl.org/wiki/Hilmar_Lapp Hilmar Lapp] (National Evolutionary Synthesis Center)
  
'''Ex Officio (Members of the O|B|F Board)'''
+
'''Ex Officio (Members of the OBF Board)'''
 
* [http://www.bioperl.org/wiki/Chris_Dagdigian Chris Dagdigian]
 
* [http://www.bioperl.org/wiki/Chris_Dagdigian Chris Dagdigian]
 
* [http://www.bioperl.org/wiki/Jason_Stajich Jason Stajich]
 
* [http://www.bioperl.org/wiki/Jason_Stajich Jason Stajich]
Line 131: Line 80:
 
== Previous BOSCs ==
 
== Previous BOSCs ==
  
* The first BOSC was held in 2000.
+
* BOSC has been held yearly since 2000.
 
* [[BOSC 2012]] took place in Long Beach, California, in July 2012.
 
* [[BOSC 2012]] took place in Long Beach, California, in July 2012.
* [[Past BOSC conferences | Information about the first 12 conferences]]
+
* [[Past BOSC conferences | Information about the first 13 BOSC conferences]]
  
 
== Contact Us ==
 
== Contact Us ==
  
* [http://twitter.com/#!/BOSC2012 Follow BOSC on Twitter]: @BOSC2013, #bosc2013
+
* [http://twitter.com/#!/BOSC2012 Follow BOSC on Twitter]: @OBF_BOSC, #bosc2013
 
* If you'd like to join the mailing list for BOSC-related announcements, including the call for abstracts and deadline reminders, please subscribe to the [http://lists.open-bio.org/mailman/listinfo/bosc-announce Bosc-announce] list.  This list has low traffic, and your address will be kept private.
 
* If you'd like to join the mailing list for BOSC-related announcements, including the call for abstracts and deadline reminders, please subscribe to the [http://lists.open-bio.org/mailman/listinfo/bosc-announce Bosc-announce] list.  This list has low traffic, and your address will be kept private.
 
* If you have questions about the conference, or would like to volunteer to help out, please contact the organizers at [mailto:bosc@open-bio.org bosc@open-bio.org].
 
* If you have questions about the conference, or would like to volunteer to help out, please contact the organizers at [mailto:bosc@open-bio.org bosc@open-bio.org].

Latest revision as of 12:47, 26 February 2016

The Bosc Pear
The 14th Annual Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC 2013) took place July 19-20, 2013, in Berlin, Germany, right before ISMB/ECCB 2013.

The conference schedule is available here as HTML (including links to presentations) and here as a PDF file (A4 format). The complete program, including all accepted talk and poster abstracts, is here.


Conference report preprint: Harris et al. (2013) The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) 2013. PeerJ PrePrints 1:e83v1; abridged formal report: Harris et al. (2014) The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) 2013. Bioinformatics (in press)

Important Dates

Overview

The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) is a two-day Special Interest Group of ISMB. It is sponsored by the Open Bioinformatics Foundation (OBF), a non-profit group dedicated to promoting the practice and philosophy of Open Source software development within the biological research community.

Open Source software has flourished in the bioinformatics community for well over a decade. When the first BOSC (Bioinformatics Open Source Conference) was held in 2000, there were already a number of popular open source bioinformatics packages, and the number and range of these projects has increased dramatically since then. BOSC covers the wide range of open source bioinformatics software packages that have been successfully developed and adopted by the community, and encompasses the growing movement of Open Science, with its focus on transparency, reproducibility, and data provenance. We welcome submissions relating to all aspects of open source bioinformatics software and open science, including new computational methods, reusable software components, visualization, interoperability, and other approaches that help to advance research in the biomolecular sciences. Two full days of talks, posters, panel discussions, and informal discussion groups will enable BOSC attendees to interact with other developers and share ideas and code, as well as learning about some of the latest developments in the field of open source bioinformatics.

Please spread the word about BOSC--all are welcome. On Twitter, follow @OBF_BOSC and use hash tag #bosc2013.

Keynote Speakers

This year's keynote speakers will be Sean Eddy of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Janelia Farm, and Cameron Neylon of the Public Library of Science.

Sean Eddy Cameron Neylon More information about BOSC 2013 Keynote Speakers

Session Topics

The conference schedule is available here as HTML and here as a PDF file, including Birds of a Feather (BoF) meetings.

  • Open Science and Reproducible Research -- New this year, this session encompasses the theory and practice of open science, including open notebook science, open data, transparent and reproducible workflows, and shared standards for reviewing and publishing research papers.
  • Cloud and Parallel Computing -- This session focuses on approaches that use cloud and other massively parallel infrastructures for processing and analyzing large and heterogeneous biological data. We are particularly interested in solutions demonstrating how to build new or extend existing software, resources and workflows to perform at scale for "Big Data" problems.
  • Genome-scale Data Management -- This session encompasses software and other tools designed for managing, exploring, and analyzing genome-level data to address research questions, including but not limited to genome assembly, variant prediction, eQTL analysis, and phylogenomic methods.
  • Visualization -- Current data acquisition technologies are moving us more and more towards a "data first, hypothesis later" paradigm for scientific research. As a result, data visualization and visual analytics are of increasing importance. This session focuses on approaches for interactive as well as static visual representations of biomedical data, ranging from exploration to explanation.
  • Software Interoperability -- This session covers Open Source approaches to integrating the latest bioinformatics tools. Building flexible, reproducible workflows with connected tools is essential to modern bioinformatics. The goal of this session is to investigate how we can increase tool connectivity and help communities work better together.
  • Translational Bioinformatics -- This session will explore applications of biological and medical informatics to the development of personalized healthcare, therapies, and a better understanding of human health and disease. Topics include the analysis of large scale population and family sequencing data, bioinformatics methodologies for clinical research, and tools for discovering clinically useful associations in human databases. We especially welcome work that bridges the gap between research and patients, making analysis tools available and understandable for non-scientists.
  • Bioinformatics Open Source Project Updates -- This session will feature short talks from ongoing projects describing their recent progress. Abstracts will be solicited from open source projects affiliated with the OBF (see http://www.open-bio.org/wiki/Projects), including the Bio* projects, DAS, BioMOBY, EMBOSS, and GMOD, but any other open-source project will be equally eligible to submit abstracts for this session.
  • Panel: Strategies for funding and maintaining open source software

Submitting Abstracts

The deadline for abstract submissions for talks was April 12, 2013. Late poster abstracts were accepted until June 7. We have reserved a few spaces for walk-in posters, which must meet the BOSC requirements of open source and recognized license. The ISMB staff specify that posters should not exceed the following dimensions: 0.95 m wide x 1.30 m high.

Eagle Genomics logo

We thank Eagle Genomics, Ltd. for helping to sponsor three Student Travel Awards at BOSC 2013. Each student winner will receive $250 towards travel expenses. In addition, the Open Bioinformatics Foundation will grant these three students free admission to the conference.

BOSC Organizing Committee

Chair

  • Nomi L. Harris (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

Members

Ex Officio (Members of the OBF Board)

Previous BOSCs

Contact Us

  • Follow BOSC on Twitter: @OBF_BOSC, #bosc2013
  • If you'd like to join the mailing list for BOSC-related announcements, including the call for abstracts and deadline reminders, please subscribe to the Bosc-announce list. This list has low traffic, and your address will be kept private.
  • If you have questions about the conference, or would like to volunteer to help out, please contact the organizers at bosc@open-bio.org.