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=== Upcoming Seminars === | === Upcoming Seminars === | ||
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* '''Biology Faculty Candidate 3''' | * '''Biology Faculty Candidate 3''' | ||
** '''Model Lesson on Animal Physiology:''' Thursday, 11/30 at 11:30 AM, PER 200 | ** '''Model Lesson on Animal Physiology:''' Thursday, 11/30 at 11:30 AM, PER 200 |
Revision as of 17:28, 29 November 2017
Contents
- 1 Announcements
- 2 Instructors
- 3 Students
- 4 Course Schedule
- 5 Course Information
- 5.1 Instructors
- 5.2 Prerequisites/Recommended Background
- 5.3 Class Meetings and Attendance
- 5.4 Mutual Responsibilities
- 5.5 Classroom Conduct
- 5.6 Course Website
- 5.7 Email Communication
- 5.8 Required Materials
- 5.9 Course Description
- 5.10 Course Work and Grading
- 5.11 Work Load Expectations
- 5.12 University Policy on Academic Honesty
- 5.13 Americans with Disabilities Act—Special Accommodations
- 5.14 Revision Notice
Announcements
- Week 9 feedback has been provided on the user talk pages and corresponding points have been posted to Brightspace. —Dondi (talk) 09:28, 24 November 2017 (PST)
- Week 7 feedback has been provided on the user talk pages and corresponding points have been posted to Brightspace. —Dondi (talk) 22:47, 21 November 2017 (PST)
- Week 8 & 10 feedback has been provided for the Data Analysts on their user talk pages. They should make the requested changes to their individual Week 8 and 10 pages as one of the deliverables for the group project. — Kdahlquist (talk) 16:54, 20 November 2017 (PST)
- Feedback on the Team Pages has been recorded on each team member's User Talk pages. Please make the requested changes as part of the Week 12 team assignment. — Kdahlquist (talk) 16:44, 16 November 2017 (PST)
Upcoming Seminars
- Biology Faculty Candidate 3
- Model Lesson on Animal Physiology: Thursday, 11/30 at 11:30 AM, PER 200
- Lunch with Students: Thursday, 11/30, 12:30-1:30, LSB 2nd floor Terrace
- Research Seminar: Friday, 12/1 at 2:00 PM, LSB auditorium
Undergraduate Library Research Award
The projects for this course will qualify for the Hannon Library’s Undergraduate Library Research Award (ULRA). Click on the link if you are interested in this competition.
Instructors
Students
GRNsight Gene Page Project Links | |||||||
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Overview | Deliverables | Reference Format | Guilds | Project Manager | Quality Assurance | Data Analysis | Coder |
Teams | Page Desiigner | Lights, Camera, InterACTION! | Gene hAPI | JASPAR the Friendly Ghost |
Course Schedule
The current course schedule is shown below. In addition to the listed in-class agendas, the following guidelines are also notable:
- Unless otherwise stated on the schedule, your weekly journals/assignments are due on Tuesdays at 12:01am. In cases where subsequent revisions or corrections will be accepted, the instructors will provide feedback and submission deadlines on a per-assignment basis.
- Reading assignments should be completed before coming to class.
- Dr. Dionisio’s office hours (TR 11:30am–1pm, WR 4:15–6pm, or by appointment) can be viewed as unofficial lab sessions: use them for IT help or desktop support
Part 1: Building Blocks (Genetic Code and Web Pages)
# | Date | Reading | Agenda | Journal |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tuesday 8/29/2017 |
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Week 1
(due at 12:01am 9/5) | |
Thursday 8/31/2017 |
Chapter 1 of On Becoming a Biologist by John Janovy, Jr. (on Brightspace)
Voices of Computing and Computing is a Natural Science by Peter Denning (these links should be accessed from within LMU to get the full article) |
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2 | Tuesday 9/5/2017 |
DataONE: Data Management PowerPoint (on Brightspace) |
|
Week 2
(due at 12:01am 9/12) |
Thursday 9/7/2017 |
On Brightspace:
Brown, T.A. (2002) Genomes 2, Ch. 3, especially section 3.3.2 |
| ||
3 | Tuesday 9/12/2017 |
McMurry et al. (2017) Identifiers for the 21st century: How to design, provision, and reuse persistent identifiers to maximize utility and impact of life science data. PLoS Biol 15(6): e2001414. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.2001414
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An overview of computers, networks, files, web applications, web services, and databases
|
Week 3
(due at 12:01am 9/19) |
Thursday 9/14/2017 |
Introduction to the Command Line
Dynamic Text Processing ( |
Command line lab session
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4 | Tuesday 9/19/2017 |
Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the Worldwide Web, is the 2016 recipient of the A. M. Turing Award—computer science’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize:
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Web page authoring
|
Week 4
(due at 12:01am 9/26)
|
Thursday 9/21/2017 |
Introduction to biological databases (part 1)
| |||
5 | Tuesday 9/26/2017 |
The 24th annual Nucleic Acids Research database issue | Introduction to biological databases (part 2)
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Week 5
(due at 12:01am 10/3)
|
Thursday 9/28/2017 |
For more on the Human Genome Project, see: |
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6 | Tuesday 10/3/2017 |
Database presentations part 1
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Week 6
(due at 12:01am 10/10) | |
Thursday 10/5/2017 |
Database presentations part 2
|
Part 2: Going Deeper (Gene Expression Data and Web Services)
# | Date | Reading | Agenda | Journal |
---|---|---|---|---|
7 | Tuesday 10/10/2017 |
A little more Bootstrap
|
Week 7
(due at 12:01am 10/17)
| |
Thursday 10/12/2017 |
A taste of web services
| |||
8 | Tuesday 10/17/2017 |
Alberts et al. (2002) Molecular Biology of the Cell, Ch. 8: Microarrays Brown & Botstein (1999) "Microarrays" Nature Genetics Campbell & Heyer Chapter 4 (on on Brightspace) DeRisi et al. (1997) Science 278: 680-686. |
Introduction to DNA microarray data
|
Week 8
(due at 12:01am 10/24) |
Thursday 10/19/2017 |
DNA Microarray Analysis activity part 1
| |||
9 | Tuesday 10/24/2017 |
Dahlquist et al. (2016) “GRNsight: a web application and service for visualizing models of small- to medium-scale gene regulatory networks” | An introduction to GRNsight…beta version
Web services and APIs
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Week 9
(due at 12:01am 10/31)
|
Thursday 10/26/2017 |
Case study web service API: https://open.fda.gov/api/ | |||
10 | Tuesday 10/31/2017 |
Dahlquist et al. (2016) “GRNsight: a web application and service for visualizing models of small- to medium-scale gene regulatory networks” | Microarray Data Analysis part 2
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Week 10
(due at 12:01am 11/7) |
Thursday 11/2/2017 |
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Part 3: Integrating for Research (GRNsight integration)
# | Date | Reading | Agenda | Journal |
---|---|---|---|---|
11 | Tuesday 11/7/2017 |
Begin GRNsight Gene Page Project
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Week 11
(due at 12:01am 11/14) | |
Thursday 11/9/2017 |
Literature searching and annotated bibliographies
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12 | Tuesday 11/14/2017 |
First Set of Journal Club Presentations
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Week 12
(due at 12:01am 11/21) | |
Thursday 11/16/2017 |
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13 | Tuesday 11/21/2017 |
Second Set of Journal Club Presentations
|
No Week 13 assignment | |
Thursday 11/23/2017 |
Thanksgiving—no class | |||
14 | Tuesday 11/28/2017 |
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Week 14
(due at 12:01am 12/5) | |
Thursday 11/30/2017 |
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15 | Tuesday 12/5/2017 |
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Week 15
(due at 4:30pm 12/12) | |
Thursday 12/7/2017 |
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F | Tuesday 12/12/2017 |
Final project presentations 2:00-4:00 PM | ||
Friday 12/15/2017 4:30 PM |
Project deliverables due 4:30 PM |
Course Information
Instructors
Kam D. Dahlquist, Ph.D.
- http://myweb.lmu.edu/kdahlqui
- Phone: (310) 338-7697
- E-mail: kdahlquist at lmu dot edu
- Office: Life Sciences Building 289
- Office Hours: Mondays 1:00-3:00 PM, Tuesdays and Thursdays 4:00-5:00 PM, and by appointment; I keep a sign-up sheet next to my office door to facilitate appointment-making.
John David N. Dionisio, Ph.D.
- http://dondi.lmu.build
- Phone: (310) 338-5782
- E-mail: dondi at lmu dot edu
- Office: Doolan 106
- Office Hours: TR 11:30am–1pm, WR 4:15–6pm, or by appointment
Prerequisites/Recommended Background
To take this course, you must have upper division standing in the Seaver College of Science and Engineering. Otherwise, there are no strict prerequisites. Backgrounds in biology and computer science, as well as prior experience with web, database, or information management applications, may be helpful but not necessary.
Class Meetings and Attendance
TR 2:40–3:55pm, Seaver 120
This is a hands-on, participatory course, thus attendance at all class meetings is required. Each student is allowed two “sick” days (automatically excused absences) during the semester. Further unexcused absences from class will result in a 5% deduction from the overall course grade for each absence. Every effort should be made to attend class on oral presentation days as the content of that day's class is dependent on student participation. Unexcused absences from an oral presentation will result in a grade of zero for the presentation. The instructors should be notified as soon as possible, electronically or by phone, of the reasons for all absences.
Note that the last day to add or drop a class without a grade of W is September 1. The withdrawal or credit/no-credit status deadline is November 3.
Mutual Responsibilities
This course is designed to foster your development as a biologist and computer scientist and to give you an authentic research experience. We will be engaged together in discovering, examining, and practicing the personal qualities, technical skills, and community standards of the scientific community. While you are ultimately responsible for your own learning, you are not alone. Our class constitutes a team where we will be learning from each other. The role of the instructors is to provide the expert coaching to support and assist you on your journey. All of the exercises, readings, assignments, and policies detailed below have been designed with this purpose in mind.
Classroom Conduct
We are all responsible for maintaining a classroom and laboratory environment that is safe and conducive to learning. As such, we will observe the following:
- As an LMU Lion, by the Lion’s code, you are pledged to join the discourse of the academy with honesty of voice and integrity of scholarship and to show respect for staff, professors, and other students.
- You are responsible for your own learning and for being a good class citizen.
- Class will start promptly on time.
- You are expected to come to class having done the assigned reading and preparatory work so that you are ready to participate in discussions and to perform the laboratory exercises.
- You are expected to bring the required materials to each class session.
- Cell phones and other ancillary devices must be turned off and put away out of sight. Your own laptop and/or tablet may be used to conduct the class exercises, provided that you have confirmed with the instructors that you have the correct versions of software installed for the exercise. If, however, the laptops/tablets are being used for other purposes and become distracting to you or others, you will be asked to put them away.
- All students are governed by LMU Community Standards publication. Disruptive behavior which is persistent or significantly interferes with classroom activities may be subject to disciplinary action. A student may be referred to the Office of Student Judicial Affairs if his or her behavior constitutes a violation of the conduct code.
Course Website
This is the course web site and wiki, hosted by http://xmlpipedb.cs.lmu.edu/biodb/fall2017/. You will need to have a user account on this wiki to be able to edit the wiki and complete coursework. Updates to the course schedule and electronic copies of all handouts, assignments, and readings will be posted to this site. You will also use the site to keep an electronic lab notebook/journal for the course. In addition, students have been automatically enrolled in the course page on Brightspace. The two cross-listed sections are using the same site, which is listed as "BIOL/CMSI 367-01 Biological Databases". The site will be used for materials that cannot be made public on this wiki, including grades.
Email Communication
At times we will communicate with the entire class using campus email systems, so it is essential that you regularly check your lion.lmu.edu email address or forward your lion account email to your preferred email address. Messages sent to the instructors at night or on the weekend will be answered the next school day. Please cc: both instructors on all email messages related to this class.
Required Materials
Texts
There is no required text to purchase for the course; materials will be put on reserve at Hannon Library or will be available online on this wiki or Brightspace site. Specific reading assignments are given on the course schedule and should be completed before coming to class.
- Assorted handouts, articles, and sample code will be distributed throughout the semester.
- Additional information is also available on the web; do not hesitate to look for further sources of information regarding the concepts, techniques, tools, and paradigms that we will discuss.
Materials (must be brought to each class meeting)
- 3-ring binder with all course handouts
- Pen, pencil, extra paper
- USB flash drive to store data
- Account for this wiki
- GitHub account
Course Description
The disciplines of biology and computer science come together in bioinformatics, where computational tools are needed to manage and analyze the flood of data coming from new genomics technologies. Biological databases form a significant part of this young and exciting field. This course introduces students to both the biology and computer science expertise needed to understand, use, and develop biological databases. Biology topics include the fundamentals of genetics, molecular biology, and biochemistry needed to understand the data stored in biological databases, as well as the biotechnologies used to gather these data in a high-throughput manner. Computer science topics include what biological databases are, why they are important (and needed), and the challenges that arise in compiling them effectively. Biology and computer science lectures on topics that are relevant to biological databases are coupled with hands-on experience with a variety of software packages ranging from bioinformatics utilities to general-purpose database and software development tools. After learning how to use a biological database, students will be asked to build one of their own.
Course Objectives and Learning Outcomes
This course is built upon L. Dee Fink’s taxonomy of significant learning, as applied to biological databases. Long after the course concludes, our hope is that:
- You understand how biological information is encoded in the genome and can apply this knowledge to a variety of biological tasks and problems
- You understand the core concepts, structure, and functions of a database, ranging from individual files to a full relational database management system, and can perform useful tasks with such data
- You show discipline and proficiency in day-to-day science and engineering best practices, such as maintaining journals and notebooks, managing your files and code, and critically evaluating scientific and technical information
- You recognize and care about how the biological and technological issues presented in this course relate to and affect society, our daily lives, and ourselves
- You have some skills and tools for “leaving your comfort zone,” flourishing outside of it, and learning more about biology and computer science on your own
- You learn how to communicate and work effectively with colleagues from different disciplines
University Core Curriculum
This course fulfills the following requirements in the University Core Curriculum:
- Integrations: Interdisciplinary Connections
- Upper Division Information Literacy Flag
- Upper Division Oral Communication Flag
Course Work and Grading
Letter grades are determined as follows: ≥ 90% gets an A– or better; ≥ 80% gets a B– or better; ≥ 70% gets a C– or better. The instructors may curve grades upward based on qualitative considerations such as degree of difficulty, effort, class participation, time constraints, and overall attitude throughout the course. Grades are never curved downward. Current grades will be made available at Brightspace.
Your work in this course will be assessed in five areas:
Weekly electronic lab notebook/journal assignments, individual (10 points each) | 140 | points |
Weekly electronic lab notebook/journal assignments, shared (3 points each) | 42 | points |
Oral presentations | 105 | points |
Information literacy (additional points added to two journal assignments) | 24 | points |
Final Project Deliverables (including written report) | 175 | points |
Total | 486 | points |
Electronic Laboratory Notebook/Journal
One of the most important skills you can develop as a scientist is keeping an excellent laboratory notebook. For computational research, the equivalent of the biology paper-based lab notebook is documentation of your “workflow.” For this course you will practice documentation skills by keeping an electronic lab notebook or journal. The technology we will use is this wiki. We will create and edit during the semester. The wiki software is the same one that runs Wikipedia and many other wiki sites, so proficiency gained here is easily transferrable to other applications.
You will create an individual user page and make weekly entries that the instructors will read and grade. You will use the wiki to complete the assignments as well. The following guidelines apply:
- Your weekly journal entry is typically due every 12:01am on Tuesday Pacific time; consult the schedule for specific due dates for each assignment.
- Each weekly assignment has an individual component and a shared component. You will earn 10 points per weekly submission for the individual journal entry and 3 points per submission for the shared journal entry. Late journal entries will be accepted up to one week later for up to half credit.
- The instructors will read and comment on how to improve your journal entries on your user talk pages.
- Depending on the type of assignment for that week, you may be given the opportunity to make improvements to previous journal entries as the semester progresses.
- For most weeks in the semester, you will be assigned a "homework partner" from the complementary biology or computer science discipline. You will be expected to consult with your partner, sharing your domain expertise, in order to complete the assignment. However, unless otherwise stated, each partner must submit his or her own work as the individual journal entry (direct copies of each other's work is not allowed).
- Generally, your journal entries will consist of:
- Your electronic laboratory notebook (workflow and other documentation) for hands-on exercises and projects
- Answers to any specific questions posed in the exercise
- Acknowledgments section (see Week 1 assignment for details)
- References section (see Week 1 assignment for details)
- Shared reflection on your learning, assigned readings, or ethics case studies.
Oral Presentations
You will give three oral presentations in this course. The first two will be in the format of a “Journal Club” presentation where students will present and lead discussion of research articles from the primary literature. The third will be a research presentation on your final project. Because that day’s class content is dependent upon each student being ready to present and lead discussion, late journal club presentations will not be accepted. An unexcused absence from a journal club presentation will result in a grade of zero for the presentation.
Final Group Project
In addition to the research presentation, the culmination of your final project will be the preparation of a written laboratory report in the style of a manuscript that could be submitted to a peer-reviewed journal, specifically PeerJ Computer Science. Specific instructions will be posted later in the semester. The Final Written Report cannot be accepted any later than Friday, December 15 at 4:30pm. The Final Written Report must be completed to receive a passing grade in the course.
Extra Credit
Students may accumulate up to 12.5 points toward their final grade in extra credit by attending Department seminars in Biology or Electrical Engineering & Computer Science and completing the seminar sheets. Each seminar attended is worth 2.5 points with up to 5 seminars (12.5 points) total. You must attend the entire seminar from start to finish and personally turn in your seminar sheet to a faculty member at the end of the seminar.
Certain non-Biology/Computer Science Department seminars may be approved in advance for extra credit at the instructors’ discretion. To receive credit for these seminars, you must turn in a one-page hard copy of your summary of the seminar in class, within one week of the date of the seminar or they will not count as extra credit.
Work Load Expectations
In line with LMU’s Credit Hour Policy, the work load expectation for this course is that for every one hour (50 minutes) of classroom instruction, you will complete a minimum of two hours of out-of-class student work each week. This is a 3-unit course with 3 hours (150 minutes) of instruction per week. Thus the expectation is that you will complete 6 hours of work outside of class per week.
University Policy on Academic Honesty
Loyola Marymount University is a community dedicated to academic excellence. Academic honesty in scholarship and creative work stands at the center of LMU's academic life, and is essential for true learning and creation of knowledge to take place. As a university in the Jesuit and Marymount traditions, this community expects its members to act in accordance with the highest standards of honesty and ethics at all times. Violations of academic honesty undermine the fundamental educational mission of the University and cannot be tolerated.
Academic dishonesty will be treated as an extremely serious matter with severe consequences that can range from receiving no credit for the assignment, failing the class, to expulsion. It is never permissible to turn in any work that has not been authored by the student, such as work that has been copied from another student or copied from a source (including Internet) without properly acknowledging the source. It is the student's responsibility to make sure that your work meets the standard set forth in the “Academic Honesty Policy” (see http://academics.lmu.edu/honesty.) You are responsible for contacting the instructor before assignments are due to proactively resolve any questions you may have.
Click here for an online version of the LMU Academic Honesty Policy and Procedures.
You are required to sign the Academic Honesty Agreement for this course.
Academic Honesty Resources
- Academic Honesty Agreement
- LMU Academic Honesty Policy and Procedures
- The Davidson College Department of Biology Statement on Plagiarism
- Guidelines for Literature Citations in a Scientific Paper
- Notes on plagiarism from an electrical engineering & computer science perspective
- BIOL/CMSI 367 LibGuide
Americans with Disabilities Act—Special Accommodations
Students with special needs who require reasonable modifications, special assistance, or accommodations in this course should promptly direct their request to the Disability Support Services (DSS) Office. Any student who currently has a documented disability (ADHD, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Learning, Physical, or Psychiatric) needing academic accommodations should contact the DSS Office (Daum Hall 2nd floor, 310-338-4216) as early in the semester as possible. All discussions will remain confidential. Please visit http://www.lmu.edu/dss for additional information. In addition, please schedule an appointment with the instructors early in the semester to discuss any accommodations for this course for which you have been approved.
Revision Notice
If necessary, this syllabus and its contents are subject to revision; students are responsible for any changes or modifications announced in class. The most current version of this information resides on this page, the course web site at http://xmlpipedb.cs.lmu.edu/biodb/fall2017/.