Here are a few of the talks I've given since I started Grad School at UCLA. They are offered for people who missed them or would like a refresher. I offer them with no guarantee of accuracy or warranty of awesomeness. There may be mistakes in them. I did my best to vet all information contained in them when I was creating them, but our understanding of things may have changed since then. All of my talks are made with Apple's Keynote slideware and Adobe Illustrator.
I gave a short primer talk to my lab and to the first year graduate students taking BME 205.
I gave an in class presentation on the New York Times Graphics Desk.
I addressed the Genome 10K meeting and gave the preliminary results for the alignathon competetion.
I addressed the Genome Assembly Workshop of the 2011 Genome 10K meeting and gave the preliminary results for the assemblathon competetion.
I gave the review for UCLA EEB135/235 Population Genetics for Charles E. Taylor. The goal was to remind students of the breadth and scope of the course. The talk is also available as a PDF.
I gave a lecture for a UCLA Fiat Lux freshman seminar that was covering the Gaia hypothesis and was familar with the concept of Daisy World. The goal was to give the class a basic overview of Ecology and Evolution to further their understanding of the biosphere. The Movie from the presentation is here. This talk is also avaliable as a janky PDF. This talk was originally given in a shorter version (it was just the first half, really) in EEB 133/233, Computational and Theoretical Population Biology in May 2006.
This tech-talk was given to interested graduate students in the EEB Department at UCLA. Example files are here.
A series of seven lectures given to UCLA EEB133/233, a course on Theoretical and Computational Population Biology for which I was the TA.