The University of Texas at Austin has received National Science Foundation
funding for an Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship
(IGERT) program in Computational Phylogenetics and Applications to
Biology. As part of this program, a total of 60 graduate traineeships
will be available from fall 2001 through spring 2007. Up to twelve
trainees are funded each year. Trainees for the 2003-2004 academic
year are to be awarded a stipend of $27,500 per year and a cost-of-education
allowance of $10,500 per year, and they may apply for a second year
of funding.
This comprehensive, interdisciplinary graduate training program involves
approximately 30 faculty participants from the computational and biological
sciences at The University of Texas at Austin. Two major research
areas are being emphasized: computational phylogenetics, which is
concerned with the computational aspects of phylogenetic inference,
and applied phylogenetics, which uses estimated phylogenies to address
a wide diversity of biological questions.
Areas of major research
effort within the IGERT group are show above.
All projects involve the interaction of the central area (computational
phylogenetics) with one of the application areas (shown around the
outside).