Marekwas born and educated in Poland. He
graduated from the Jagiellonian University in Krakow and completed his PhD in astrophysics at N. Copernicus Centre in Warsaw. He moved to Durham in 2000 as a postdoc and stayed there until 2009 in a
succession of research and teaching positions. His main interest there was weird astrophysical objects: black holes and neutron stars. 2009 marked a dramatic
change in his career: switching to Bioinformatics. One huge step for a man…
Marek joined the DAG on 23rd March 2009
Nick Schurch:
Nick, like Marek has also made the transition from astrophysics. He will be adding more details about himself soon...
Nick joined the DAG on 1st May 2009
Pietà Schofield:
After working as a programmer and systems analyst for various finance sector companies, Pietà spent five years working as systems manager for the Parke-Davis Neuroscience
Research Centre in Cambridge. She then returned to academia completing a PhD in mathematical biology at the University of Dundee in 2002. Since then she completed a Wellcome Trust Training Fellowship in
Mathematical Biology, switching theoretical insects for the real thing. Pietà joined the Data Analysis Group in January 2009 from the SCRI where she developed methods for
thermographic detection of plant stress.
Pietà joined the DAG on 1st January 2009
Chris Cole: Senior Bioinformatics Research Officer and founder member of the Data Analysis Group.
As another ex-Simon Hubbard group member (like Ian) Chris found the attraction of Dundee too great to miss. He dragged his
family along with him, although, his wife was happy to be back in Scotland!
Chris left the bench after a traumatising Ph.D. and has been 'doing' Bioinformatics ever
since. In that time he has worked on protein-protein interface prediction, homology modelling, Prion protein structure analysis and various aspects of proteomics. Now in Dundee Chris works on
a variety of projects, but mainly in the realm of protein structure. Under his remit in the Scottish Bioinformatics Research Network,
Chris is always happy to discuss interesting problems which may have a Bioinformatics angle.
Chris joined the group on 1st Feb 2006 and then became the founding member of the Data Analysis Group.
David Martin- Is the Post Genomics and
Molecular Interactions Centre Bioinformatics Scientific Officer. David graduated with a degree in Chemistry from Kings College London in 1991. He completed a PhD in protein structure/function at the MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Hammersmith in Ted Tuddenham's group before taking up an EMBO postdoctoral fellowship in Oslo. An EU
TMR fellowship as part of the GeneQuiz project allowed David to develop his bioinformatics skills and he took the position as Head of the Norwegian EMBNet node at
the University of Oslo in August 1999. Following his move to Dundee in March 2001 David has a broad responsibility to develop bioinformatics support, training and services for the emerging data
intensive science that is going on in the School of Life Sciences. David's scientific interests include genome annotation and data management. He has developed the GOtcha Tool which annotates sequences with GO term. He also collects genomes to annotate, preferably ones from nasty organisms such as Malaria and Sleeping Sickness. His interest is in improving the annotations,
working out how to tell the annotations have improved (not as easy as you might think) and looking at these anntoations in a systems biology context.
His external interests seem to involve rebuilding cars, houses and boats when he isn't out in the mountains or enjoying family life. He
also plays the clarinet and saxophone but not as well as you'd want to be listening to.
Geoff spends his leisure time working with the Men in Black, and more recently - The Three Musketeers. Since July 2005 he has
also discovered tennis. After finding like-minded musical colleagues in the College of Life Sciences he has now revived his love of flute playing.