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Friday, November 30, 2018, 01:30pm - 06:00pm
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Contact Gabor Balazsi, host
 
The workshop's aim is to explore how physicists should think about cancer, and whether there are principles at the level of molecules, single cells or cell populations that form a core of understanding.
 

Synopsis

Despite decades of ongoing research, cancer remains a serious health burden and a major scientific puzzle. The search for new approaches to cancer research has generated interest among engineers, programmers and computer scientists. Among the growing influx of computational and engineering methods, it may be unclear what physicists have to offer. And methods are not what they offer. Rather, they offer entirely new perspectives and questions arising from a quest for principles.

 
1:30 PM Bob Austin, PhD, Research in Biophysics, Physics Department, Princeton
Cancer Tumors:  The Ultimate Complex Adaptive Matter
 
2:30 PM  Sui Huang, MD, PhD, Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle
From non-linear dynamics to single-cell transcriptomics of cell state transitions – Why Cancer Treatment Backfires…
 
3:30 PM   Refreshments
 
4:00 PM  Marsha Rosner, PhD, Ben May Department for Cancer Research, Univ of Chicago
Rewiring Signaling Pathways in Cancer Cells
 
5:00 PM  Gabor Balazsi, PhD, Laufer Center and BME, SBU
Control knobs, thresholds and cancer cell reprogramming

5:30 PM   Reception
 
 
 
Location Laufer Center Lecture Hall 101
Refreshments and Reception in Laufer Center Hub 110