MBZUAI's Computational Biology department hosted the first Data Carpentry workshop in the UAE, a global initiative focused on foundational data science skills for researchers. The workshop included 35 participants from academia and industry, covering topics like data tidiness, cloud computing, command lines, and data wrangling. 70% of the participants were female, and several were Emirati nationals. Why it matters: This initiative addresses the growing need for computational skills in genomics research, bridging the gap between wet lab experiments and data analysis for scientists in the UAE.
KAUST researchers organized a week-long workshop on bioinformatics, covering genomics and transcriptomics data analysis. The workshop targeted students, postdocs, and senior researchers, providing hands-on training in coding and analysis using tools like R, Python, and shell scripts. Attendees with little prior computational biology experience were introduced to fundamental concepts and tools for handling large sequencing datasets. Why it matters: The workshop addresses the increasing need for bioinformatics expertise at KAUST and in the region, crucial for advancing research in fields like evolution and complex diseases.
Holger Pirk from Imperial College London is developing a novel approach to data management system composition called BOSS. The system uses a homoiconic representation of data and code and partial evaluation of queries by components, drawing inspiration from compiler-construction research. BOSS achieves a fully composable design that effectively combines different data models, hardware platforms, and processing engines, enabling features like GPU acceleration and generative data cleaning with minimal overhead. Why it matters: This research on composable database systems can broaden the applicability of data management techniques in the GCC region, enabling more flexible and efficient data processing for various applications.