Libby Shoop, Associate Professor of Computer Science
Room 232, Olin-Rice
shoop at macalester dot edu
News and Notes
Feb
7
Some links for Bioinformatics Databases
While speaking to the Bioinformatics course on Feb. 8, I will mention
these links to interesting lists of databases and detailed information
about certain databases:
Nucleic Acids Research Biological Database List
The history of PIR,
including Dr. Margaret Dayhoff
A 1969 review of the Atlas of Protein Sequence and Structures
The PIR database
A description
of the flat file representation of UniProt.
Other Uniprot documentation
Uniprot database public download site
XMLPipeDB,
a tool for creating relational data from XML data specifications.
An Example database schema (visual depiction)
of a hypothetical WHO Database.
Example document from the WHO document repository
List of documents from the U.S. CDC
Dec
4
Textbook for COMP 120, Spring '08
A Balanced Introduction to Computer Science, 2nd edition
David Reed
Pearson Education
ISBN 0-13-601722-3
Dec
4
Textbooks for COMP 124, Spring '08
The Art and Science of Java, An Introduction to Computer Science
Eric S. Roberts
Addison-Wesley, Pearson Education
ISBN 0-321-48612-9
Modern Software Development Using Java, 2nd edition
Paul Tymann and Michael Schneider
Course Technology
ISBN 10: 1-4239-0123-1
Dec
4
Textbook for COMP 480, Spring '08
Mastering Data Modeling
John Carlis and Joseph Maguire
Addison-Wesley
ISBN 9780201700459
About Me
As far as teaching goes, I specialize in computer science, and in particular database systems, Object-Oriented programming with Java,
and Internet computing. My research interests include
bioinformatics, improving data
visualization and exploration, extending database systems for scientific data, and distributed computing.
Before coming to Macalester, I
conducted research at the Center for Computational Genomics and
Bioinformatics at the University of Minnesota. I'm an avid sports fan
and outdoor enthusiast, and particularly enjoy biking, camping, hiking, roller
blading, and softball. Drinking coffee and attending the Minnesota Lynx
WNBA basketball games are my most prominent addictions.
The Data Exploration Lab
Room 259 of Olin-Rice Science Center holds the data exploration lab, which I use for research projects with students
and for activities in courses related to database systems and Internet computing. We have three Mac OS X servers and
two Sun Microsystems servers for providing web and data services and for conducting software development
of data exploration tools.
Data exploration tools are typically
web-based applications that enable users to access distributed databases
and visualize the information in these databases in novel and empowering
ways. Students working in the lab will design and build databases and
web-based programs for exploring data in distributed data warehouses.
These projects may be related to bioinformatics, but also could be for
other types of scientific or business data.