Published: May 22, 2012 By

Dan KnightsDan Knights is a humble guy, with very little reason to be humble. A short list of his titles includes high school math teacher, computer scientist and the 2003 Rubik鈥檚 Cube World Champion. He has appeared on the Today Show, The Discovery Channel and as an expert on National Public Radio鈥檚 鈥淲ait, Wait鈥 Don鈥檛 Tell Me.鈥 Dan has co-authored 21 journal publications, including two in听Science听and three in听Nature.

He is interested in applying machine learning and computational statistics to challenges in biology, genomics and engineering. He is also the first student to graduate from BioFrontier鈥檚 Ph.D. certificate program in Interdisciplinary Quantitative Biology, or IQ Biology.

鈥淭he IQ Biology program encouraged me to continue to straddle the boundary between computation and biology,鈥 said Dan 鈥淚t exposed me to a new group of scientists and strengthened my foundations in the life sciences.鈥

Dan defended his thesis work in April 2012, which also earned him the Outstanding Dissertation Award from CU-Boulder鈥檚 College of Engineering and Applied Science.听During his graduate studies, he spent much of his time in the lab of BioFrontiers faculty member Rob Knight, researching the microbiome.

Dan's advice for incoming graduate students is simple and effective: Learn programming and learn how to write code. Don't be afraid to branch out and explore other disciplines during lab rotations. You might be surprised how these connections make you better at what you do. For an impressive list of Dan's publications, visit听.听

The microbiome is the enormous collection of bacterial species that coexist in and on living organisms, including humans, and contribute substantially to our health and disease.听The bacteria can be identified indirectly through their DNA genomes, but these experiments generate a vast amount of information. Making sense of all that information required Dan鈥檚 computer science expertise.

Dan recently accepted a tenure-track faulty position as an assistant professor of Computer Science at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Campus. Before he heads to the City of Lakes, Dan is making a year long stop at The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard in Cambridge, Mass. to extend his research by doing post-doctoral work. His focus will be a mix of microbiome analysis, and a study of gut microbiota and the human immune response.

鈥淚t is unusual for a graduate student to jump right into a tenure-track faculty position, but Dan is unusually talented, and his accomplishments in both computer science and genomics served him well on the job market,鈥 said Tom Cech, Director of the BioFrontiers Institute.听鈥淗e sets a high standard for students in the IQ Biology program, and we wish him the very best.鈥