People
Herbert Sauro is a Professor in the Department of Bioengineering at the University of Washington in Seattle. His interests include anything to do with mechanistic modeling of cellular networks. Early in his career he helped develop metabolic control analysis and wrote one of the first popular pathway simulators for PCs. He was a founding member of the team that developed the systems biology exchange language, SBML, and later initiated the development of the synthetic biology open language (SBOL). ...
I consider myself a "systems biologist", trained in a variety of different areas, but primarily interested in how organisms work as integrated, self-regulating systems. Trained in protein chemistry and cell biology, I have extensive experience in modeling biological systems as well as image analysis and other novel analytical technologies. Currently, my major focus is on integrating multiple types of 'omics data to provide insight into fundamental biological regulatory mechanisms.