2022 Galaxy Community Conference (GCC2022)
July 17-23, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
https://galaxyproject.org/events/gcc2022/
April 12: Oral presentation and lightning talk abstracts due
May 12: Early registration ends
June 3: Demo and poster abstracts due
The 2022 Galaxy Community Conference (GCC2022) will be held July 17-23 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. GCC brings together hundreds of faculty, clinicians, researchers, and students, all working in and supporting data intensive science that is accessible, shareable, and reproducible.
GCC2022 features oral presentations, lightning talks, posters, demos, birds-of-a-feather gatherings (BoFs), training, a CollaborationFest, and plenty of opportunities for networking.
Presentations will cover the full spectrum of Galaxy applications, enhancements, and deployments. If you are working in data intensive science then GCC2022 is an ideal conference for sharing your work, learning from others, and finding new collaborators.
Abstract submission for talks, lightning talks, demos, and posters is now open. If you work in data-intensive science then please consider presenting your work at GCC2022. This is a chance to present to 200+ researchers, all addressing challenges in data intensive science. Abstract submissions for oral presentations are due on April 12. Submit an abstract (or two) now!
Topics of Interest
If you’re currently working on any of these topics, this conference is for you:
Omics data analysis: genomic sequencing, microbiome, proteomics, imaging, you name it!
Tools and visualizations for working with omics data
Compute infrastructure for enabling data intensive science
Galaxy applications in any domain or topic: ML, climate, NPL, …
Outreach and training related to data analysis
Registration information is available on the conference website. Early registration ends May 12. So, register early!
Galaxy is a platform for data integration and analysis in the life sciences. It enables researchers to build, run, share, and repeat their own complex computational analyses using only a web browser and without having to first learn system administration and command line interfaces.
The Galaxy Project is driven by a vibrant community who publish workflows and analyses, wrap new tools, maintain and enhance the source code, provide support, and write documentation and training materials. Galaxy is open-source and freely available, and is deployed in hundreds of organizations, running on everything from laptops to supercomputers to public and private clouds. Over 150 of these platforms are publicly available and can be used with little or no setup. Thousands of tools have been ported to Galaxy and are deployable from the Galaxy Tool Shed. Galaxy was developed to support life science research, but the platform is domain agnostic and is now used in domains as diverse as natural language processing, computational solid geometry, and social science.
Hope to see you in Minneapolis!