Team:UCSD Software/Teaml
From 2014.igem.org
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<div class="col-md-2"> | <div class="col-md-2"> | ||
<div class="thumbnail" id="underPic"> | <div class="thumbnail" id="underPic"> | ||
- | <a href = "#" id = "w1click"><img class="img-circle" src="https://media.licdn.com/media/p/8/005/091/0c2/0f9a025.jpg" ></a> | + | <a href = "#bottom" id = "w1click"><img class="img-circle" src="https://media.licdn.com/media/p/8/005/091/0c2/0f9a025.jpg" ></a> |
</div> | </div> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
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//redirecting to other pages | //redirecting to other pages | ||
$('h1.firstHeading').remove(); | $('h1.firstHeading').remove(); | ||
- | + | ||
+ | $("a[href='#bottom']").click(function() { | ||
+ | $("html, body").animate({ scrollTop: $(document).height() }, "slow"); | ||
+ | return false; | ||
+ | }); | ||
$("#w1click").click(function(){ | $("#w1click").click(function(){ |
Revision as of 12:20, 16 October 2014
UCSD’s iGEM team will join over 200 teams from across the country for a chance to compete for the BioBrick trophy.
UCSD’s computational iGEM team will focus on recruiting a team from a wide range of academic disciplines in order to expose students to interdisciplinary research. iGEM team members will have a chance to work closely with mentors during the summer, fostering a diverse skillset necessary for interdisciplinary fields such as Systems Biology. In addition to acquiring technical skills while working on the iGEM project, students in iGEM will also refine their presentation skills – typically iGEM students present their work in: an oral presentation at the iGEM World Jamboree, on a research poster, online wiki, and ocassionally, a submission to an academic journal. Participation in UCSD’s iGEM team will raise not only students’ confidence in their research abilities, but also their awareness of opportunities in emerging fields including Systems Biology.
Kwat
- Bioinformatics PhD, 2018
Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, 2012
Jenhan is a PhD student in the Bioinformatics and Systems Biology program at UCSD. He's interested in utilizing computational technqiues to increase our capacity to understand complex biological problems such as cell signalling. This is Jenhan's second year working as an iGEM mentor. Previously Jenhan was involved in synthetic biology research as an iGEM team member at Boston University and as a research assistant at UC Berkeley, the BioFAB, and Boston University.