ObjectivesBioinformatics is a comparatively new discipline that has arisen from the need to extract biologically useful information from the vast quantities of raw experimental data presently being generated in the biosciences. This degree is designed for students from a range of scientific backgrounds, who are particularly interested in the study of computational and scientific developments in bioinformatics and the application of this knowledge to the fields of molecular and biological science. The aim of the degree is to provide students with a high-quality postgraduate training in bioinformatics which meets the needs of the pharmaceutical, chemical and biotechnology industries for research and development.
Entry requirementsEntry requirements Students may have first degrees in a wide range of subjects, including biology, computer science, mathematics, chemistry or physics. Some practical knowledge of one programming language would be a distinct advantage. Mathematics to A-level or equivalent desirable, but O-level/GCSE considered.
Academic titleBioinformatics with Systems Biology (MSc)
Course descriptionCourse units: Biocomputing I and II; Databases; Molecular Structure; Statistics; Sequence Analysis; Genome Analysis; Systems Biology.
Project areas include: genome analysis; microarray analysis; homology modelling; biological database design; image processing; structural data analysis; text mining.
Teaching
This degree emphasises active learning. Practical exercises, reinforcing and expanding on the preceding lectures, are integral to most modules. Teaching includes contributions from specialists at other universities and research institutions.
Assessment
Two written papers, an individual project, coursework and an oral examination.
When to apply
You should apply as early as possible.