
Professor

0000-0003-1756-3654
CC-BY, Dr Tomasz Zielinski
Andrew
Millar
School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh
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ORCID ID
Socials
Lab web
Positions
Research Summary
Model Systems
Research Methods
The BioRDM team (see photo) supports Open Research and FAIR data management, with chrono-psychiatrists, biologists, developers at EPCC and University infrastructure. Our BioDare2 offers rhythmic timeseries analysis, visualisation and sharing for chronobiology. Andrew Millar’s earlier group used mathematical tools to build the Arabidopsis Framework Models that predict clock phenotypes. He also works on science policy, metaresearch, trees and BioClocks UK.
Arabidopsis or other plants; Ostreococcus or other algae; Humans; In silico, AI-driven, or theoretical; Synthetic
Basic/fundamental/discovery research; Qualitative research; Mixed methods research; Clinical research/clinical trials; Non-clinical human studies; Social sciences research (including psychology); Molecular biology (including genetics and gene editing); Systems biology; Synthetic biology; Bioinformatics; Imaging; Ecology and environmental research
Chair of Systems Biology
Lab
The BioRDM Team
Personal web
Resources and Tools
BioDare2 gives you 8 fast methods for timeseries analysis, as well as interactive visualisations and public data sharing. https://biodare2.ed.ac.uk. The BioRDM wiki has lots of advice on managing biological data and lists our current work: https://www.wiki.ed.ac.uk/display/RDMS/. Our “FAIR in Practice” courses teach data management for researchers. Materials for a circadian-focussed course are here: https://github.com/BioRDM/fair-in-circadian-practice
Industry Partnerships
Current commercial links are not in circadian research.
I am happy to be contacted by
Policymakers or think tanks; Learned societies; Funders or charitable organisations; The media; Prospective industry partners
