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The official Jupyter Conference
August 22-23, 2017: Training
August 23-25, 2017: Tutorials & Conference
New York, NY
Jeremy Freeman

Jeremy Freeman
Manager of Computational Biology , Chan Zuckerberg Initiative

Website | @thefreemanlab

Jeremy Freeman is manager of computational biology at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, where he is helping develop efforts to support and accelerate basic research with tools for analysis, visualization, and collaborative sharing of data and knowledge. Previously, he ran a neuroscience research lab for several years. A scientist at the intersection of biology and technology, Jeremy wants to understand how biological systems work and use that understanding to benefit both human health and the design of intelligent systems. He is passionate about open source and open science and bringing scientists and engineers together across a range of fields.

Sessions

8:55am–9:10am Friday, August 25, 2017
Location: Grand Ballroom
Jeremy Freeman (Chan Zuckerberg Initiative)
Average rating: *****
(5.00, 1 rating)
Modern biology is evolving quickly, but if we want to make our science more robust, more scalable, and more reproducible, the major bottleneck is computation. Jeremy Freeman offers an overview of a growing ecosystem of solutions to this challenge—many of which involve Jupyter—in the context of exciting scientific projects past, present, and future. Read more.