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Connecting Colorado Research: Inside DBMI’s First Interdisciplinary Symposium

Seven Colorado institutions gather at CU Anschutz to showcase interdisciplinary research and spark new collaborations

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by Melinda Lammert | June 23, 2026

The Department of Biomedical Informatics at the University of Colorado Anschutz (CU Anschutz) hosted its first ever interdisciplinary symposium on May 4, bringing together researchers from seven Colorado institutions for a full day of collaboration, discovery and dialogue.

Held at CU Anschutz, the Scientific Computing, Informatics, Applied Mathematics, and Healthcare Technologies Symposium welcomed participants from CU Anschutz, CU Boulder, CU Denver, CU Colorado Spring, Colorado State University (CSU), Colorado School of Mines and the University of Denver. The symposium was organized by Nicholas Dwork, Melike Sirlanci and Carlos Rodriguez.

The agenda featured a dynamic mix of plenary talks, research presentations, tutorials and software demonstrations spanning genomics, artificial intelligence, mathematical modeling and clinical informatics. Highlights included plenary presentations from Jennifer Mueller, professor of mathematics and biomedical engineering at CSU, on radiation-free lung imaging technologies and Emily Jensen, PhD, assistant professor of systems and controls at the CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science, on distributed control systems, as well as a wide range of talks on topics such as gene-trait associations, pediatric lung function, tumor genomics and multi-omic risk prediction.

In addition to formal presentations, the symposium included a poster session and dedicated networking opportunities designed to foster new collaborations across disciplines and institutions.

Three people stand in a modern indoor lobby beside poster boards displaying research presentations on wheeled stands; one person in the foreground stands next to a poster featuring colorful medical imaging graphics, while two others view posters in the background.
1 Researchers present and review scientific posters during an indoor poster session, featuring work on medical imaging and computational analysis.
Audience members sit at tables in a conference room, listening while using laptops and taking notes during a presentation; coffee carafes and refreshments are set up at the back of the room.
2 Attendees engage in a research presentation session, following along on laptops and notes during a seminar-style event.
A presenter stands at a podium in a conference room, delivering a talk beside a large projected slide titled “The Challenge: Scale Meets Complexity,” which highlights statistics about gene-trait pairs, polygenicity, and pleiotropy.
3 A speaker presents research on the complexity of genetic traits during a seminar, emphasizing scale, polygenicity, and shared genetic influences across diseases.
A speaker presents research on the complexity of genetic traits during a seminar, emphasizing scale, polygenicity, and shared genetic influences across diseases.
4 Attendees listen closely during a research seminar, following along with laptops and notes in a classroom-style setting.
A presenter stands at a podium in a large conference room, speaking beside a projected slide titled “ClarifAI,” which outlines a multi-stage workflow and an LLM-assisted pipeline with diagrams and labeled steps.
5 A speaker presents the ClarifAI framework during a research session, illustrating a multi-stage, AI-assisted workflow for clarifying and structuring information.

 

Attendees emphasized the value of bringing together diverse perspectives from across Colorado’s research ecosystem. “The symposium was a great opportunity to connect with interdisciplinary researchers in Colorado,” said plenary speaker Jensen. “It gave me a new perspective about technical questions and challenges both in common and distinct from my own work. I'm hopeful that this chance to connect outside my typical circle will lead to exciting future research directions and collaborations.”

Stephen Becker, associate professor of applied mathematics at CU Boulder, echoed that sentiment, noting, “The best part was seeing work from so many Colorado universities.”

Mueller highlighted the event’s inclusive and collaborative environment, “It’s a diverse mixture of informative talks with well-engaged participants that brought together graduate students, post docs and faculty.”

By convening researchers across institutions and disciplines, the symposium underscored the growing importance of collaboration in addressing complex challenges in biomedical informatics and computational science, and set the stage for future cross-campus partnerships.

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Staff Mention

Emily Jensen, PhD

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Jennifer L. Mueller