In their own words:
The Eli and Edythe L. Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT is founded on two core beliefs:
- This generation has a historic opportunity and responsibility to transform medicine by using systematic approaches in the biological sciences to dramatically accelerate the understanding and treatment of disease.
- To fulfill this mission, we need new kinds of research institutions, with a deeply collaborative spirit across disciplines and organizations, and having the capacity to tackle ambitious challenges.
The Broad Institute is essentially an “experiment” in a new way of doing science, empowering this generation of researchers to:
- Act nimbly. Encouraging creativity often means moving quickly, and taking risks on new approaches and structures that often defy conventional wisdom.
- Work boldly. Meeting the biomedical challenges of this generation requires the capacity to mount projects at any scale — from a single individual to teams of hundreds of scientists.
- Share openly. Seizing scientific opportunities requires creating methods, tools and massive data sets — and making them available to the entire scientific community to rapidly accelerate biomedical advancement.
- Reach globally. Biomedicine should address the medical challenges of the entire world, not just advanced economies, and include scientists in developing countries as equal partners whose knowledge and experience are critical to driving progress.
The Detecting Novel Associations in Large Data Sets software and data is from the Broad Institute.
Sounds like the sort of place that would be interested in enhancing research and sharing of information with topic maps.