News
![UCSD and SDSC to Host National Computational Molecular Biology Meetings](https://soeapp.ucsd.edu/tools/uploads/news/2004/RECOMBBourne11.jpg)
March 23, 2004
UCSD and SDSC to Host National Computational Molecular Biology Meetings
San Diego, CA, March 23, 2004 -- Faculty and researchers at the Jacobs School of Engineering and San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) are preparing to host what has become one of the most influential conferences in the world dealing with bioinformatics. This year's Research in Computational Molecular Biology -- RECOMB 2004 for short -- will take place March 27-31 in San Diego (http://recomb04.sdsc.edu/), and will feature the best research in bioinformatics, combined with invited talks from experimental biologists. "This is a scientific forum for theoretical advances in computational biology and their applications in molecular biology and medicine," says UCSD pharmacology professor Philip Bourne, who is Director of Integrative Biosciences at SDSC and also Conference General Chair of RECOMB 2004. "The origins of the conference came from the mathematical and computational side of the field, but the effective use of computational techniques for biological innovation is also an important aspect of the conference." SDSC took the lead in sponsoring the 2004 conference. Full Story
![Founder of UCSD Bioengineering Program Honored with Lifetime Achievement Award from Asian American Engineers](https://soeapp.ucsd.edu/tools/uploads/news/2004/Fung1.jpg)
March 1, 2004
Founder of UCSD Bioengineering Program Honored with Lifetime Achievement Award from Asian American Engineers
San Diego, CA, Monday, March 1, 2004 -- A Chinese engineer who came to the United States right after World War II and went on to do pioneering research in aeronautics and bioengineering has been honored by his fellow Asian American engineers. On Feb. 28, Yuan-Cheng Fung received the Distinguished Life Time Achievement Award at the 2004 CIE EWEEK Asian American Engineer of the Year Award Banquet in Santa Clara, CA. Full Story
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Nanoscale Bumps and Grooves Trigger Big Changes in Cell Behavior
The surfaces that cells come into contact with can influence how the cells grow, function, and communicate – shaping metabolism and even cellular health. Now, bioengineering and nano engineering researchers at UC San Diego have developed a platform for studying the ways that nanoscale growing surfaces can impact cellular behavior. Full Story