About this Research Topic
This Research Topic as part of Frontiers in Bioinformatics’ collaboration with Bioimaging North America (BINA) 2024, aims to empower the bioimaging community by fostering an environment conducive to collaboration, innovation, and expertise development. We seek to bring together researchers, developers, and practitioners to share insights, tools, and best practices that can accelerate progress in Bioimaging bioinformatics. Our goal is to highlight novel approaches, promote the development of user-friendly tools, and provide a platform for the dissemination of knowledge that can bridge the gap between imaging and computational analysis.
We welcome contributions across various sub-themes including, but not limited to:
• Development of novel bioimaging computational tools include analysis and acquisition software.
• Optimization and benchmarking of existing bioimaging computational methods.
• Studies demonstrating the application of bioinformatics in bioimaging.
• Community-driven datasets and collaborative projects making use of bioinformatics.
• Perspectives, reviews and case studies on enhancing expertise of bioinformatics for the purpose of bioimaging.
We particularly encourage submissions leveraging the Technology and Code article type, ensuring tools are accessible and reproducible by the wider community. Additional article types are however considered including Original Research, Reviews, Perspectives, and Data Reports. By focusing on these key themes, this Research Topic seeks to cultivate a collaborative and innovative ecosystem that propels the advancement of bioimaging. Early submissions are welcomed.
Beth Cimini is a scientific advisory board member to Marble Therapeutics. David Joy is an employee and shareholder of Denali Therapeutics.
Keywords: Bioimaging, computation, tool development, training, informatics, BINA, Bioinformatics
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.