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Physical chemist and computational biologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philip Eric Bourne (born 1953) is an Australian bioinformatician,[10] non-fiction writer,[2] and businessman.[4] He is currently Stephenson Chair of Data Science and Director of the School of Data Science and Professor of Biomedical Engineering[11] and was the first associate director for Data Science at the National Institutes of Health, where his projects include managing the Big Data to Knowledge initiative, and formerly Associate Vice Chancellor at UCSD.[12] He has contributed to textbooks and is a strong supporter of open-access literature and software. His diverse interests have spanned structural biology, medical informatics, information technology, structural bioinformatics, scholarly communication and pharmaceutical sciences.[10] His papers are highly cited, and he has an h-index above 80.[13][14][9]
Phil Bourne | |
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Born | Philip Eric Bourne 1953 (age 70–71)[1] |
Alma mater | Flinders University (PhD) |
Known for |
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Spouse |
Roma Chalupa (m. 1983) |
Children |
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Awards |
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Scientific career | |
Fields | Data Science Computational Biology Scholarly communication[9] Bioinformatics |
Institutions | |
Thesis | Crystal structure analyses : metal complexes of biological interest and the stereochemistry of substituted phonylbicyclooctanes (1979) |
Notable students | Werner G. Krebs |
Website | datascience |
Bourne was trained as a physical chemist in the mid to late 1970s and obtained his PhD in 1979[1] at the Flinders University.
After his PhD, Bourne moved to the University of Sheffield to do postdoctoral research during 1979–1981,[15] followed by a move to Columbia University, New York, in 1981. In 1995 he moved to University of California, San Diego, where he was a Professor in the Department of Pharmacology. In 2014, he moved to NIH to become its associate director for Data Science. In January 2017, it was announced that he had accepted a position as director of University of Virginia's Data Science Institute.[16]
He is known for writing the book Unix for VMS Users (1990)[2] and for being co-developer of the Combinatorial Extension algorithm for the three-dimensional alignment of protein structures,[17] together with I. Shindyalov (1998). In 1999 he became co-director of the Protein Data Bank.[18] He was president of the ISCB (2002–2003).[19] He is a fellow of the American Medical Informatics Association since 2002.[20] He is founding Editor in Chief of PLoS Computational Biology (2005-). In 2007 he co-founded SciVee.[4] Bourne is an editor of the popular Ten Simple Rules series of editorials published in the PLoS Computational Biology journal.[21] He has served as the Associate Vice Chancellor for Innovation and Industrial Alliances[12] and a professor of pharmacology at the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD).[22][23] He is an advisor to the Hypothes.is project[24] and associate director for Data Science at the National Institutes of Health where his projects include managing the Big Data to Knowledge initiative.[25][26]
Bourne is author of numerous scientific articles and book chapters and editor of the Structural Bioinformatics textbook.[27][28] and Pharmacy Informatics[29] Other publications[9] include:
Bourne was elected Fellow of the AAAS under Pharmaceutical Sciences in 2011[5] and Fellow of the International Society for Computational Biology (ISCB) in 2011.[6] In 2010 he won Microsoft's Jim Gray e-Science award[7] and in 2009 won the Benjamin Franklin Award (2009).[8][30]
Bourne has been married since 1983 to Roma Chalupa and they have two children: Scott Bourne (1985-) and Melanie Bourne (1997-).[citation needed] His interests include motorcycles,[31] flying, and hiking
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