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Abbreviation | QFAB Bioinformatics |
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Formation | 2007 |
Type | academic not-for-profit |
Headquarters | Institute for Molecular Bioscience University of Queensland Brisbane |
Region | Australia |
Director | Dr Dominique Gorse |
Website | qfab |
QFAB Bioinformatics is a Queensland-based organisation concerned with the provision of resources in bioinformatics, biostatistics and specialised computing platforms. QFAB operates Australia-wide and is a key contributor to the EMBL Australia Bioinformatics Resource. [1]
QFAB was established in 2007, [2] with funding from the Queensland Government's National and International Research Alliances Program, [3] as a joint venture between The University of Queensland, Queensland University of Technology, Griffith University, CSIRO’s Australian eHealth Research Centre and the Queensland Government’s Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry.
Mark Ragan from the Institute of Molecular Bioscience (IMB) and Anthony Maeder from the Australian eHealth Research Centre led QFAB's establishment[ citation needed ] and appointed Jeremy Barker as CEO (2007–2014) to address three critical issues then facing bioinformatics in Queensland: [4]
In 2015, Dominique Gorse became CEO of QFAB and led the strategic alliance with QCIF, the Queensland Cyber Infrastructure Foundation; the two organisations merged in April 2016. [5] QCIF operates significant high-performance computing, cloud computing and data storage resources, is part of the national eResearch infrastructure.
QFAB Bioinformatics is a unit of the Queensland Cyber Infrastructure Foundation (QCIF), a not-for-profit member-based organisation.
QFAB and QCIF, together with the University of Melbourne's Melbourne Bioinformatics, and the University of Queensland's Research Computing Centre jointly built and operate Galaxy Australia, which is a major feature of the Genomics Virtual Laboratory, [6] based on the Galaxy (computational biology) scientific workflow system.
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