Welcome to SynergyOmics
SynergyOmics is a platform dedicated to exploring the fascinating intersection of computational biology, bioinformatics, and machine learning. Here, I share paper summaries, tutorials, research insights, and personal perspectives on navigating the world of computational biology and academia.
About Me
I'm Adham Alkhadrawi, a computational biology researcher with expertise in genomics, proteomics, medical imaging, and drug-target interaction modeling. Currently, I'm a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Hawai'i at MÄnoa, working on protein engineering using large language models.
My research journey has taken me from chemical engineering and metabolic pathway optimization to medical image analysis and knowledge graph design. I'm passionate about building reproducible data pipelines and translating computational methods into practical biomedical applications.
Research Interests
- Computational Biology & Bioinformatics
- Protein Engineering with Machine Learning
- Knowledge Graph Design & Analysis
- Medical Image Analysis (MRI/CT)
- Drug-Target Interaction Modeling
- Genomics & Proteomics
- Reproducible Scientific Workflows
What You'll Find Here
This blog covers a range of topics related to computational biology and bioengineering:
- Paper Summaries: Digestible breakdowns of recent research papers in computational biology and bioinformatics
- Tutorials: Practical guides on bioinformatics tools, machine learning techniques, and computational methods
- Research Insights: Lessons learned from research projects and best practices for reproducible science
- Academic Advice: Tips for navigating graduate school, postdoctoral research, and scientific careers
- Personal Views: Reflections on science, research culture, and the future of computational biology
Get in Touch
I'm always interested in connecting with fellow researchers, students, and anyone passionate about computational biology. Feel free to reach out:
- Email: info@synergyomics.com, adhamalk@hawaii.edu
- Location: Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
This blog represents my personal views and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of my affiliated institutions.