Biological Physical Sciences Interdisciplinary Network (BPSInet)
Source: https://www.york.ac.uk/physics-engineering-technology/research/bpsi/ Parent: https://www.york.ac.uk/about/departments/
- Communication technologies
- Condensed matter and materials physics
- Healthcare engineering
- Intelligent systems and robotics
- Nuclear Physics
- Physics of Life
- Quantum science and technologies
- Fellowships
- Early Career Researchers Forum
Biological Physical Sciences Interdisciplinary Network (BPSInet)
About the Biological Physical Sciences Interdisciplinary Network
Established in 2013 under the stewardship of Professor Mark Leake and rebadged as a network in 2020, the Biological Physical Sciences Interdisciplinary Network (BPSInet) at the University of York serves to stimulate and fund exciting new collaborative activities at the cutting-edge interface between the Physical and Life Sciences, encompassing multiple exceptional research teams across several different departments of the University, including Physics, Biology, Chemistry, Electronics, HYMS, Mathematics, Psychology and Computer Science.
BPSI Strategy Report - July 2016 (PDF , 869kb)
Research Areas
Scientific areas of the BPSInet are divided broadly into three inter-related strands of research excellence with several members of the BPSInet interfacing multiple strands.
- Imaging and Quantitation
- Biomolecular Interactions
- Biological Modelling
Read more on our Research page.
Links
Many of our members are also associated with world-class interfacial research centres across the University of York, allowing the BPSInet to maintain close synergistic links between multiple complementary areas of research excellence across the University.
These centres include:
- York Plasma Institute (YPI)
- York Structural Biology Lab (YSBL)
- York Neuroimaging Centre (YNIC)
- Bioscience Technology Facility
- York Centre of Excellence in Mass Spectrometry
- York JEOL Nanocentre
- Centre for Chronic Diseases and Disorders (C2D2)
- Physics of Life
The BPSInet also maintains close ties to several national-level physical-life sciences initiatives, groups and networks in the UK, including:
- Biological Physics Group (BPG) of the Institute of Physics
- British Biophysical Society (BBS)
- Royal Microscopical Society (RMS)
- EPSRC-funded “Physics of Life” network
- Biophysical Sciences Institute - Durham University
In particular we liaise closely with the Physics of Life Group in the Department of Physics at York. The Physics of Life Group at York captures Biological Physics and Biophysics, involving biophysics research and teaching which includes experimental and theoretical biophysics tools spanning multiple length and time scales, as well the use of physical science tools and techniques to address biophysics questions in the life sciences, physical methods of relevance to technology touching life (TTL) applications in biology and biomedicine, and approaches which use biophysics in the context of biological- derived material to explore new physics.