Chairperson
Joel H. Saltz, Health Sciences Center Level 3, Room 3-043, (631) 638-2590
Graduate Program Director
Ramana V Davuluri, Ramana.Davuluri@stonybrookmedicine.edu, (631) 638-2590
Department Office
Department of Biomedical Informatics
College of Engineering and Applied Sciences and School of Medicine
Health Sciences Center Level 3, Room 3-043
Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, NY 11794-8322
Main number: 631-638- 2590
BMIGradEd@stonybrookmedicine.edu
Degrees Awarded
Ph.D. in Biomedical Informatics; M.S. in Biomedical Informatics; Advanced Graduate Certificate in Biomedical Informatics
Web Site
https://bmi.stonybrookmedicine.edu/
Application
https://graduateadmissions.stonybrook.edu/apply/
The Department of Biomedical Informatics currently offers graduate work leading to the Doctor of Philosophy, Master of Science degree and Advanced Graduate Certificate in three areas of specialization, or Tracks:
- Clinical Informatics - enhancing the quality and efficiency of clinical workflows;
- Imaging Informatics - integrative analysis and management of biomedical images; and
- Translational Bioinformatics - application of informatics methods to advance patient related biomedical research, from Clinical Genomics to Population Health.
The new Stony Brook University Biomedical Informatics Program is a collaboration of the School of Medicine and in the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences. This interdisciplinary field studies and pursues the effective use of biomedical data, information, and knowledge for scientific inquiry, problem solving and decision making, driven by efforts to improve human health.
We embed BMI Education in research and operations at the Stony Brook University Health Sciences Center, where quantitative sciences have emerged at the very core of efforts to understand, prevent and treat disease. Further, our program emphasizes the ability of trainees to produce software artifacts and conduct computational experiments, along the same lines as the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences. The resulting refactoring of Informatics equips BMI trainees to play a new role in a Systems Biomedicine enterprise that spans from patient-centric information systems to the distributed analytics needed to contextualize emerging biomolecular Big Data resources.
Students will be instructed via a combination of classroom teaching, seminars, and/or structured projects. Graduates can expect careers in academia, research, healthcare, industry, or government.
For more information, visit our website: https://bmi.stonybrookmedicine.edu/
Admission requirements for Ph.D. in Biomedical Informatics:
- A bachelor’s degree in Biomedical Informatics, or a related field such as computer science, another engineering discipline, physical science, chemistry, mathematics
OR a bachelor’s degree in biology, biochemistry, pharmacology, social science
OR post baccalaureate training equivalent to the above
OR a bachelor’s degree in humanities with coursework and projects in digital arts and media
OR an MD Degree.
- A grade point average of at least B or equivalent in all engineering, mathematics, and science courses.
- Completion and submission of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test.
- A Statement of Purpose describing the applicant’s relevant past experience and immediate and long-term goals. Applicants should describe how the type of research that they expect to conduct while in the program relates to one of the department’s research areas.
- Three letters of recommendation.
- Acceptance by both the Biomedical Informatics Graduate Program and the Graduate School.
- In addition, students must meet all admissions requirements, fees, and deadlines of the Stony Brook University Graduate School.
Requests for exceptions to the stated admissions requirements must be submitted in writing and approved by the BMI Graduate Program Director and The Graduate School.
Facilities of the Biomedical Informatics Department and Graduate Program
The Biomedical Informatics Department has a strong foothold in computing and in biomedical sciences. Our Department was jointly established by the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Stony Brook University School of Medicine.
BMI’s three locations on campus offer students and faculty front seats in key centers of collaborative activity. Each BMI Department location features extensive learning and research suites with faculty and administrative offices, Postdoctoral trainee stations, classroom and meeting space, and student labs equipped with desktop computers, each with 1TB storage space, 16GB main memory, and a 4-core CPU. The Department’s HSC Suites have opened in the Health Sciences Center HSC Level 3, and include the Chair’s suite and administrative center. A second BMI location with office, meeting and student lab is under construction in the Old Computer Science Building on West Campus. The third BMI Department suite will be housed with the Cancer Center in the new Medical and Translational Research (MART) building being constructed adjacent to the new Stony Brook Children’s Hospital. Virtual meeting solutions continue to keep all Department members together, and enable distance learning.
The Biomedical Informatics Department (BMI) has a cluster computing system dedicated to research, development, and education in high performance computing, systems software, and applications. The cluster system consists of 10 compute nodes and 10 storage nodes. Each compute node has 2 10-core Intel Xeon CPUs, 2 NVIDIA K40 Tesla GPUs, one Intel Xeon Phi co-processor, 256GB main memory, a 512GB SSD, and 2 1TB hard-disks. Each of the storage nodes has 2 6-core CPUs, 64GB main memory and 95TB disk storage in RAID 5 configuration. All the nodes in the cluster are connected to each other via high performance Infiniband Switches. The cluster system is housed in the Department of Computer Science. BMI also owns a small Virtual Machine server farm consisting of a Dell PowerEdge server with 4 8-core CPUs, 256 GB main memory, and 28TB disk storage. This server is used to host VMs for development and testing purposes.
In addition to BMI owned servers and computers, researchers have access to XSEDE resources (https://www.xsede.org) through a scientific gateways grant. The XSEDE resources include Stampede which is a distributed-memory Dell Linux Cluster with over 6,400 nodes. Each node has 2 Intel Xeon E5 (Sandy Bridge) processors, 32GB memory, and an Intel Xeon Phi Coprocessor (MIC Architecture) with 8GB memory. The computation nodes are interconnected with Mellanox FDR InfiniBand technology. BMI’s Student and meeting space has wifi and wired connections available to the SBU network. In recent years the use of cloud computing has taken center stage in both translational biomedical informatics and bioinformatics and students will also be introduced to those resources.
General Requirements for the Biomedical Informatics Graduate Program
Registration: Students must register for at least one graduate credit in the semester in which the diploma is awarded.
Language Requirement: There is no foreign language requirement.
Grade Point Average: To be certified for graduation a cumulative graduate grade point average of 3.0 (out of 4.0) or better is required.