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Jürgen Claesen is an Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Data Science at Amsterdam UMC, affiliated with VU Amsterdam, and a guest lecturer at the Data Science Institute, Hasselt University. His research focuses on the development of statistical and computational methods for high-throughput biological experiments.
Research Expertise: His work is primarily focused on high-dimensional omics, specifically in the fields of sequencing and mass spectrometry.
Specialized Methodologies: He has extensive experience in structural bioinformatics, computational proteomics, and next-generation sequencing.
Key Research Themes:
Immune Age: He contributed statistical methodology to recent research developing metrics that predict outcomes in clinical patients using T-cell-based immune age data.
Mass Spectrometry: A significant portion of his research involves Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange Mass Spectrometry (HDX-MS) and developing computational tools for structural biology.
Radiation and Microbiology: His research has explored the effects of radiation on microbial communities, including intestinal dysbiosis in irradiation models and soil microbial changes from long-term radionuclide contamination.
By Udesh HabaraduwaJürgen Claesen is an Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Data Science at Amsterdam UMC, affiliated with VU Amsterdam, and a guest lecturer at the Data Science Institute, Hasselt University. His research focuses on the development of statistical and computational methods for high-throughput biological experiments.
Research Expertise: His work is primarily focused on high-dimensional omics, specifically in the fields of sequencing and mass spectrometry.
Specialized Methodologies: He has extensive experience in structural bioinformatics, computational proteomics, and next-generation sequencing.
Key Research Themes:
Immune Age: He contributed statistical methodology to recent research developing metrics that predict outcomes in clinical patients using T-cell-based immune age data.
Mass Spectrometry: A significant portion of his research involves Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange Mass Spectrometry (HDX-MS) and developing computational tools for structural biology.
Radiation and Microbiology: His research has explored the effects of radiation on microbial communities, including intestinal dysbiosis in irradiation models and soil microbial changes from long-term radionuclide contamination.