Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing (PSB) is a scientific meeting held annually since 1996. The conference is unusual in that its sessions are determined annually on the basis of proposals submitted by interested scientists, with the goal of presenting research only on cutting-edge topics. The conference proceedings are published by World Scientific Publishing, and also are freely available in electronic format through PubMed and through the conference web site.

Contents

[edit] Size and venue

Attendance at PSB is capped at 375 people. The venue rotates between the Hawai'ian islands, staying at a given hotel for two consecutive years and then moving to a new island.

[edit] Ethics talks

Like most scientific meetings, PSB includes keynote speakers; an unusual feature of PSB is that it always includes a keynote speech on ethics. Ethics keynote speech presenters in previous years have included:

  • 1996: Eric M. Meslin, The moral status of U.S. science and science policy: lessons from the stem cell research wars
  • 1994: Henry T. Greely, Social constraints on acquiring and using human biodata: is privacy dead?
  • 1993: Latanya Sweeney, Privacy, HIPAA and the future of genomic research: can technology help?

[edit] Influential papers

Influential papers from PSB have included the following:

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Hunter, Lawrence; and T.E.D. Klein (editors) (1996) Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing '96 World Scientific Publishing Co. ISBN-10: 9810225784 ISBN-13: 978-9810225780