Registration / Login required to post messages and upload documents.
Mailing address, email, telephone and map.
Register or Login | Contact Us | Sitemap
Modeling, simulation, high-end computing and data analysis, for information-based knowledge discovery.
Combining engineering methods with molecular biology, leading to synthesis of new functional materials, molecular machines, and therapeutics.
A multidisciplinary and holistic view of the living systems that moves beyond molecular link scales to understand biological complexity at multiple levels.
CLS in the context of Emory's Strategic Plan.
Latest developments, faculty and postdoc job opportunities, related events at Emory and elsewhere.
Current opportunities within the CLS Initiave.
CLS related seminars: notices, archived webcasts, live webcast links.
CLS steering and executive commitee members.
Faculty members affiliated with the CLS Initiative.
Contribute to the Computational and Life Sciences Strategic Initiative
Find potential collaborators based on mutual research interests.
CLS planning documents, CLS-related tech reports and preprints and other uploads (registration required to post).
Discuss scientific topics, papers or recent discoveries, find potential collaborators etc. (registration required to post).
Search

CLS Affiliated Faculty

To download a complete list of CLS Affiliated Facutly (Microsoft Excel format), click here.

Search person

This page will be enhanced to enable researchers to find potential collaborators based on mutual research interests. For now you can browse the user profiles of registered researchers on the website.

  • Vincent Huynh,
    Department of Physics, Emory University
    Mössbauer spectroscopy, electron paramagnetic resonance, metallo-protein, enzyme function, Fe-S proteins
  • Hasan Irier,
    Emory University Molecular &Systems Pharmacology
    Translational control of glutamate receptors in seizures and Epilepsy.
  • Dieter Jaeger, personal webpage,
    Biology, Emory University
  • Andrew Karellas,
    Emory University
    Radiology, Hematology and Oncology
  • Bill Kelly, personal webpage,
    Emory College
    We use Caenorhabditis elegans as a model system to study the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms that establish, maintain, and guard genome function in germ cells, which give rise to sperm and eggs.
    See: forum messages (total 4)