Research Area: Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering

Description: Biomedical engineering applies engineering principles to the medical and biological sciences. It comprises several fields of research, including bioinformatics, medical imaging, physiological signal processing, as well as medical informatics. Bioinformatics is a relatively new field of research that applies mathematical and computer science theories to organize, model and help understand fundamental biological and biomedical problems.

Applications:Biomedical engineering and bioinformatics create new knowledge from molecular to systems level. Biomedical engineering focuses on developing approaches for the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions. Major research efforts in bioinformatics include alignment of molecular sequences, gene finding, genome assembly, protein structure prediction, protein-protein interactions, and the modeling of evolution.

Professors:

Anis Biophotonics
Bouchard signal processing for biomedical applications
Boukerche (group) bioinformatics, computational molecular biology, distributed algorithms design, high performance and bio-inspired techniques
Dajani auditory signal processing
El Saddik haptics-audio-visual environments, DNA visualization
Frize(group) infrared thermography applications in medicine; clinical decision support systems,  analysis, diagnostics; medical equipment management, infra-red medical imaging processing and analysis
Giguère signal processing and hearing aids, auditory modeling and psychoacoustics, speech production and perception in noise
Groza embedded systems for healthcare monitoring, reconfigurable computing
Mao (group) graphical models and statistical inference
Matwin data mining, machine learning, and text classification, and their application to bioinformatics and biomedical engineering
Mussivand

medical devices, artificial hearts, devices for heart failure, clinical engineering, virtual patient simulation, biofluid dynamics, energy transfer, DNA extraction and identification

Peyton medical informatics, business process management, decision support, data warehousing, and privacy
Rolland-Lagan developmental biology, pattern formation, image and volume data analysis, simulation modeling, computational morphodynamics
Sankoff (group) mathematical genomics
Turcotte (group) bioinformatics, algorithms design, and machine learning

Research groups involving several professors:

  • Medical Devices Center (MDC) at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute

Some recent projects:

  • Design of Parallel strategies for the local biological and DNA sequence alignment in a grid environment [Boukerche]
  • PackageBLAST: an adaptive multi-policy grid service for biological sequence comparison [Boukerche]
  • Inference and matching of RNA secondary structure motifs using suffix arrays [Boukerche] (see Seed)
  • Simultaneous alignment and secondary structure prediction of RNA profiles [Turcotte; NSERC and CFI] (see Profile-Dynalign)
  • Evolving E-Health Business Processes Around Accessible Data Warehouses [Amyot/Peyton; ORNEC project - Partners: Cognos, Telelogic, Sybase, The Ottawa Hospital] show details
  • Intelligent Signal Processing for Environment-Sensitive Hearing Aid Devices - Smart hearing aid, technology helping people [Tyseer Aboulnasr, NSERC-CRD project, partner: Siemens/Germany ] show details
  • "Robust Blood Pressure Monitoring System": There is a pressing need for a reliable method for extracting
    clinically relevant information from arterial pulse features such as rate,pressure, rhythm and waveform [Groza; funded partially by OCE, partner: Biosign Inc.]
  • Haptics-based modeling of DNA structure: We are working towards developing a haptically enabled model for the structure of DNA. The developed model can serve as a good instructional aid for helping users to understand the molecular structure of DNA through effective visual representation and interactive manipulation. In incorporating more physical details, it may also have a future use in simulating protein and enzyme interactions with DNA [El Saddik].
  • Quantitative analysis of morphogenesis: Development of tools to quantify and simulate branching and network pattern formation in two and three dimensions [Rolland-Lagan].

Slide Show

Opportunities for collaboration: Opportunities for joint research exist at all levels, from exploratory research to contract research, from sponsoring a student to supporting a dedicated project, and many variations in between. University-based research can be very cost-effective for your company and in most cases your support can be used to leverage additional grants from government agencies resulting in a multiplying effect. To find out more about a specific lab/group, project, or to discuss your research needs,  contact the Technology & Research Development Office at (613) 562 5800 x2440. Email: research@eng.uottawa.ca , or the researcher directly (The School of EECS).

Printable Handout  


Research Area Coordinator: Turcotte
© University of Ottawa
For additional information, consult our list of contacts.
Last updated: 2011.07.25