Cambridge website for Synthetic Biology Resources

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Compiled by Jim Haseloff at the University of Cambridge.

This site contains details of recent papers and activity in Synthetic Biology, with particular emphasis on: (i) development of standards in biology and DNA parts, (ii) microbial and (iii) plant systems, (iv) hardware for scientific computing and instrumentation, (v) tools for scientific productivity and (vi) collected miscellany.

The site also contains details of Synthetic Biology research and teaching at the University of Cambridge, including the annual iGEM team run by Jim Ajioka, Jim Haseloff and Gos Micklem in Cambridge.

 

www.synbio.org.uk

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SynBio calendar

  • 04 Jun

    The Fourth International Workshop on Bio-Design Automation (IWBDA) at DAC will bring together researchers from the synthetic biology, systems biology, and design automation communities....

  • 06 Jun

    The overall goal for the workshop is to bring together scientists working in the highly interdisciplinary field of synthetic biology to present cutting-edge research aligned with three...

  • 20 Jun

    GCAT is pleased to announce a synthetic biology faculty workshop for the summer of 2012 (June 20-22) hosted by HHMI’s Science Education Alliance (SEA). The goal of this workshop...

  • 25 Jun

    A student and post-doc organised conference: they have invited the world's leading scientists to highlight the recent advances in microbial engineering, along with discussing the challenges...

  • 30 Jul

    A week long, professional development class will prepare educators to bring biological engineering and synthetic biology into their classrooms and laboratories. The workshop will include...

  • 24 Sep

  • 02 Nov

    Finals for the international Genetically Engineered Machine Competition.

  • 26 Nov

    The 2nd CSH Asia Synthetic Biology meeting will be held at the Suzhou Dushu Lake Conference Center in Suzhou, China, located approximately 60 miles west of Shanghai.

  • 09 Jun

    (Re-)constructing and Re-programming Life

04 Jun - 09 Jun
20 Jun - 27 Jun
30 Jul - 28 Sep
02 Nov - 01 Dec
09 Jun - 15 Jun

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Synbio news:
9 Oct 2010

Total nobel prizes won sine 1901 top five countries

Over the past week, the Nobel prizes have been awarded in chemistry, medicine, peace, physics and literature.

The awards are an annual ritual celebrating human intellectual endeavour that began in 1901. They were set up by Alfred Nobel, a Swedish inventor and arms manufacturer, who requested in his will that his fortune be used to create a series of prizes for those who confer the "greatest benefit on mankind".

Nobel winners in their own words

Biochemist Dr Frederick Sanger, who won it twice
  • The BBC has unearthed previously unseen interviews with Nobel scientists in its archives
  • These have now been digitised, see link below

Over the intervening 109 years, more than 500 prizes have been awarded. But which nation can claim the most winners?

We have trawled throught the archives to produce a definitive list of the nations with the biggest brains.

A clear winner would be the United States which comes out top overall, as well as in five of the six categories. The UK is next, with 117 Nobel medals. However, France, which bumps along in fourth or fifth, is clearly ahead when it comes to literature.

But there are a total of 69 countries or territories whose citizens have picked up the prize, from St Lucia to this week's latest addition, Peru, birthplace of author Mario Vargas Llosa.

Document

DownloadNobel prizes by country [37kb]

Notes:

  • The figures include all Nobel Prizes awarded up to and including 8 October 2010
  • Prizes are allocated to the country/countries stated on the winner's biography on the website of the Nobel Prize committee (www.nobelprize.org)
  • Where the website mentions multiple countries in relation to a prize winner (country of birth; country of citizenship; country of residence at time of award) each of those countries is credited as having won the prize
  • Where a prize has multiple winners, the country (or countries) of each winner are credited
  • Prizes which were declined by the winner are included
  • Prizes won by organisations are not allocated to countries
  • The Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel is not a Nobel Prize per se, but it is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences according to the same principles as for the Nobel Prizes. We therefore include it

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