The CBIO lab

The CBIO group performs research and development in computational biology at the faculty of pharmacy and biomedical sciences (FASB) at the UCLouvain, in Brussels (Belgium). We are located at the de Duve Institute and collaborate with groups of the various research institutes on the campus to tackle biomedically challenging questions using statistics and machine learning. The development and publication of scientific software (1, 2, 3) is an integral part of our work and is reflected by our contributions to the Bioconductor project.

Keywords: data analysis, experimental design, statistics, programming, R, scientific software, machine learning, reproducible research, proteomics.

Open Science and Reproducible Research

We are committed to the open, transparent and rigorous practice of scientific enquiry. In particular, we make every possible effort to make our research repeatable, reproducible and replicable, in the hope that it can be re-used and improved upon by as many as possible. Concomitantly, we release all our software and data under open permissible licences. Finally, we will also ensure that our research (such as, but not limited to journals articles, presentations, and book chapters) is published under open access licences to allow everybody to freely read, re-use and mine it.

Good practice

Software engineering and programming are an important aspects of our work. We hence try to adopt common good practice and coding style.

See the wiki for some useful links.

Code of Conduct

The lab is dedicated to providing a welcoming and harassment-free experience for everyone, and we expect cooperation from all members and collaborators to help ensuring a safe environment for everybody. See the Code of conduct page for a longer version.

Funding

The CBIO lab benefits from funding from

The CBIO lab thanks Zulip for the free Cloud Standard hosting. Zulip is a open-source modern team chat app designed to keep both live and asynchronous conversations organised.

Contact

On the fediverse at lgatto@fosstodon.org or by email.