Swedlow Lab
Wellcome Trust Centre for Gene Regulation & Expression, University of Dundee, UK
Jason Swedlow earned a BA in Chemistry from Brandeis
University in 1982. He performed his PhD in Biophysics
with Profs D. A. Agard and J. W. Sedat, finishing in 1994.
Dr Swedlow was a postdoctoral fellow at UCSF and then Harvard Medical
School from 1994 and 1998, supported by a Damon Runyon
Walter Winchell Cancer Research Fund Fellowship from 1995
to 1997. In 1998, Dr Swedlow established his
own laboratory
at the Wellcome Trust Biocentre, University
of Dundee, Scotland as a Principal Investigator and
Wellcome Trust Career Development Fellow. He was awarded a Wellcome Trust Senior Fellowship in 2002, and named Professor of Quantitative Cell Biology in 2007. His lab focuses on
studies of mitotic and interphase chromosome structure and
dynamics. He is Co-Director of the Analytical and Quantitative Microscopy Course. He is
co-founder of OME (along with Peter Sorger and Ilya Goldberg).
Chris Allan is a Canadian born software developer and systems administrator
from Vancouver, British Columbia who joined the Swedlow lab in early 2003.
His early contributions were the initial implementation of mass-storage
infrastructure and network groundwork to support the
University of Dundee's
Light Microscopy Facility (LMF), but he now spends most of his time working
on the OMERO.server project. Chris gained most of his systems administration
and software development expertise as a high-school student working
in the commercial sector doing security, systems and network consulting for
local companies and as a contractor/employee in the GT Trust high-security
solutions team of
GT Group Telecom Services
(now a division of Bell Canada).
His software interests lie in the fields
of distributed computing, secure programming practices and encryption. When
not with a head down in Java, C++ or Applied Cryptography he can be
seen playing the most Canadian of games, Ice Hockey, with various teams in
Dundee including Hockey For All.
Colin Blackburn joined the OME project in late 2007 as a Python
developer. Originally graduating in physics, and then computational
physics, he has worked in psychology, physiology and astronomy
as a developer of scientific software. When he finds the time
he balances the sedentary nature of his obsession with cryptic
crosswords with orienteering, fell running and the occasional
mountain marathon.
Jean-Marie Burel joined the staff of the Swedlow lab in 2003. Since then, he's been
contributing to the development of OME, and spends most of his time working on the OMERO.insight project. He received is PhD in mathematics from
the University of Brest in 2000. His research interests lie in the area of harmonic
maps, harmonic morphisms and geometric structure. After his PhD, he worked in a
private company as developer then moved (September 2001) to Lund University, Sweden,
where he held a post-doctoral research position. Jean-Marie now enjoys the muddy rugby
pitches of Scotland.
Gus Ferguson joined the OME team in March 2012. His focus is human factors engineering, user interface design, usability and user experience. He trained in Medicine in Cape Town and did an MSc in HCi at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh. Most of his work has involved drawing on his experience in clinical and research medicine for system developments in the areas of Biomedical Informatics and Bioinformatics. Previous areas of computing research have included cancer genetic risk analysis, modelling of cancer genetic screening, evolutionary computing and augmented virtual reality. He lives in Fife and most of his leisure time is spent swimming, walking or just geeking out with his son. He is also involved in promoting wildlife conservation in farming, which somehow always seems to involve lots of mud.
Emma Hill received her PhD from the University of Cambridge, where she completed her research at the MRC-LMB. She then carried out post-doctoral research at The University of California, Berkeley. In 2005, Emma moved into scientific publishing as an Associate Editor for PLoS Biology. She joined the Journal of Cell Biology as Executive Editor in 2007. During her three years there Emma worked closely with OME to help develop and implement the JCB DataViewer. After moving to Dundee in 2010, Emma worked as administrator for the Dundee Cancer Centre for a year before joining the OME team in 2011.
Roger Leigh joined the OME team in March 2012 as a software developer. He received his PhD in Biology from the University of York in 2012 where he worked in the Centre of Immunology and Infection investigating the vascularisation of lymphoid organs during embryonic development using epifluorescence, confocal and multi-photon microscopy, of both live and fixed tissues in addition to utilising in vitro models of angiogenesis and vasculogenesis with ex vivo tissue explants. He also has interests in high-throughput high-content screening and image analysis, and worked on this while on placement at AstraZeneca during his Masters degree. Roger is also a developer of the Debian GNU/Linux distribution, having interests in lightweight virtualisation, object storage, build intrastructure and general systems programming using C, C++ and Perl. In his free time, Roger is a keen mountaineer, climber and cyclist, in addition to spending far too much time hacking on Debian and Free Software.
Scott Littlewood joined the OME team in August 2011 as a software developer. He received a BSc in Compuer Science from The University of Nottingham in 2004 and continued his research on protein structure prediction for a further 2 years. Since then he has worked at several small telecommunications companies as a software developer gaining experience in agile software development and test driven design. His interests range from scalable system architectures and security to web based applications and their integration. When not in the office he can be seen running between Dundee and Carnoustie in preparation for his next marathon or alternative running event.
Scott Loynton became involved in the OME project through his doctoral
work in the Usable Image team. His research work investigated the
integration of user-centered design (UCD) with scientific software and
the specific contextual constraints of academic scientific software
development. The research work investigated these challenges from
within the OMERO project to understand more about scientific software
development in order to and include access to and strategic use of user
knowledge, funding environment, complexity and range of stakeholders. To
address this, the research proposed a new framework for developing
academic SSD that responds to these problems. His research interests
are in UCD, design theory and methodologies, user interfaces, CSCW,
e-Science, and scientific software development. Scott graduated with an
BSc(Hons) in Computer Science from the University of Hertfordshire and
the University of Wales Swansea with an MSc in Computing and Software
Technology. Outside of work Scott enjoys cycling, traveling and is
attempting to learn French.
Will Moore came to Dundee as a cell biologist to do his PhD and then joined
Jason's lab as a post-doc in 2003. Having got interested in the OME project
from a user's point of view, he decided on a change of scene and left the lab
to do an MSc in Applied Computing at Dundee University's School of Computing.
He returned to the Swedlow lab for his MSc project. His goal was to make it
easier for biologists to record their experimental metadata in a digital form.
This was the start of the OMERO.editor development, which continued when he
joined the lab as a developer in October 2007. His other interests include
mountaineering, sailing and motorbiking.
Andrew Patterson joined the OME project in 2007 to manage the data model
and project documentation. As a software developer he has worked on games,
e-learning and personal development applications. In his spare time his
interests include historic reenactment and costuming. He has typeset and
published an illustrated book on armour making. He would like a computer
controlled sewing machine but has managed, so far, to resist temptation.
He studied at the University of Dundee and the University of St Andrews
and has lived in Fife since 1989. Update: In April 2012 he bought a Elna 8300 Embroidery Machine.
Blazej Pindelski joined the OME project in April 2012 as a software developer. He studied at the Technical University of Opole and the University of Abertay Dundee as an Erasmus programme student. He holds a MSc in Computer Science and BSc in Computing and networks. His field of expertise are client-server systems and web-based applications. He is devoted to best-practice and pattern-based approach to solving computational problems. His hobbies include network and software security research and open-source technologies. He likes spending time outdoors during nice weather and interesting literature.
Aleksandra Tarkowska joined the OME project in 2007 as a software developer. She studied at the Technical University of Lodz where she received her engineering Master of Science degree in Computer Science and the Universite d'Artois in France as UE Socrates-Erasmus student. She specialises in web/internet technologies. She is enthusiastic and hardworking software developer and engineer, full of passion and commitment. Her software background includes object-oriented programming within cross-platform environments, as well as system integration in conjunction with IBM WebSphere product family. In a free time she relaxes her body and mind: riding a bike, windsurfing, skiing and mountaineering.
Wilma Woudenberg joined the OME team at Dundee University in April 2012 as Jason's PA. She also provides support for his work with Glencoe.
Funding
Development of OME in the Swedlow lab is supported by:
- The Wellcome Trust (Award Refs 068046 and 077128)
- The BBSRC (Grant Refs BB/D006589/1 and BB/D00151X/1)
Past OME Developers in the Swedlow Lab
Josh Moore — Josh has moved to work on OMERO for Glencoe Software.
Simon Wells joined the OME project in 2011 as a software developer. Simon is a computer scientist whose doctoral research used argument-based dialogue protocols to guide communication between huge numbers of intelligent software entities. His interests lie generally in answering the question of how we can build the large-scale, heterogeneous, distributed, robust, and intelligent computational systems of the future. A particular interest is in how we can build such systems from individual components which act rationally, using justifiable strategic behaviours, to satisfy both their individual and wider societal goals. Away from work Simon can be found walking his rescued Collie in North-East Fife and hanging around in dusty bookshops.
Brian Loranger joined the Dundee team in early 2006 and is currently developing
the various import tools used by OME. Originally an aeronautical engineering student,
he migrated to software development in the early 90s, and has been programming ever
since. He spent most of his early programming days working in the private sector,
primarily in the telecommunications industry. When not working on OME, he enjoys
cycling, hiking, and (when he can find a snow-covered slope) snowboarding.
Donald MacDonald started work as a developer on the OME project in January 2006.
He received his PhD in Computer Science from the University of Paisley. His research
interests include Statistical Natural Language processing, Data Visualization and
Image Classification specifically Remote Sensing images. Donald has worked as a
developer for a number of companies and recently as lecturer in Computer Science
before seeing the light and joining the OME group in early 2006.
Andrea Falconi joined the staff of the Swedlow lab in 2002. Since then, he's been
contributing to the development of OME. Over the years, Andrea has consulted
on large software projects and actively joined the development of several
applications in different domains, ranging from earth-observation to medical
and to business. Having had his brain irremediably damaged by mathematics, his
main interests are now in formal software analysis and design as well as design
patterns. Andrea now lives in South Africa, but keeps in touch, and may even
read the CVS commits!

Stefan Frank has been doing software-development both in the academic and in
the commercial field for nearly 10 years now. After graduating in
Mathematics and Philosophy in the beautiful city of Bochum, he worked for
companies like Springer, SAP, debis, DKFZ(German Cancer Research Center)
and several dot-com ventures. His main interest lies in Software
Architecture, where he tries to bring as much sound object-oriented
principles into the application, as the current state of the
J2EE-Specification allows. He is currently based in Heidelberg, Germany,
where, if he is occasionally absent from his keyboard, the most probable
place to find him is a basketball-court.

