Primary Discipline in Bioinformatics
Required Curriculum
The following courses provide a general outline of the minimum courses included in the Primary Discipline for Biomedical and Health Informatics. Students may work with the Discipline Coordinator to create an individualized plan of study.
- 6 credit hours of biostatistics
- MEDB 5501 & 5502, Biostatistics I & II
- 6 credit hours of research methodology and research ethics
- MEDB 5510, Clinical Research Methodology
- MEDB 5561, Responsible Conduct of Research
- 6 credit hours of Informatics courses (selected from the following)
- MEDB 5520, Introduction to Medical Informatics
- MEDB 5521, Clinical Bioinformatics
- BIOL 5525, Bioinformatics and Data Analysis
- COMP-SCI 5566, Introduction to Bioinformatics
Qualifying Examination
Students will take and pass a written qualifying examination that is created by department faculty in order to verify that the student is proficient in the fundamentals of the discipline. The exam will cover the core minimum coursework listed and must be passed before the student is deemed qualified to carry out doctoral-level research.
The exam must be taken within one year of completing the doctoral core coursework.
Comprehensive Examination
The comprehensive examination is the mechanism used to review and approve the plan for dissertation research which will be structured around a common question/theme/issue. There will be a written component and an oral component of the comprehensive examination. Students are required to have prepared and have an accepted comprehensive proposal of their dissertation research plan within two years following successful completion of the qualifying examination. Upon successful completion of the written and oral components of the comprehensive examination, the student wills be classified as a PhD candidate.
For the department’s policy on academic progression or more information about the Qualifying or Comprehensive Examinations, please contact the Discipline Coordinator.
Suggested Co-Discipline Areas for Bioinformatics Primary Discipline
- Mathematics and Statistics
- Cell Biology and Biophysics
- Molecular Biology and Biochemistry
- Oral Biology and Craniofacial Sciences
- Pharmaceutical Science
- Pharmacology and Toxicology
- Computer Science
- Engineering
- Public Affairs and Administration
Co-Discipline in Bioinformatics
Recommended Curriculum
While the following courses are suggested core components for the Biomedical and Health Informatics co-discipline, students may work with the Discipline Coordinator to create an individualized plan of study.
- MEDB 5510, Clinical Research Methodology or MEDB 5512, Clinical Trials
- MEDB 5511, Principles and Applications of Epidemiology or
- MEDB 5514, Human Genome Epidemiology
- MEDB 5521, Clinical Informatics
- MEDB 5501 & 5502, Biostatistics I & II
For the department’s policy on academic progression, please contact the Discipline Coordinator.
Suggested Primary Discipline Areas for Bioinformatics Co-Discipline
- Mathematics
- Oral and Craniofacial Sciences
- Cell Biology and Biophysics
- Molecular Biology and Biochemistry
- Pharmaceutical Science
- Pharmacology
- Computer Science
- Public Affairs and Administration