
Upcoming Events
Spotlight: Adam Siepel's group publishes new statistical method and analysis revising estimates of human evolution timing.
Recent News
|
Check out 3CPG Grad & Postdoc Profiles web page
Check out the new Profiles of current graduate students and postdocs in 3CPG member labs as a way to illustrate the type…
|
| Read more... |
|
New insights into signaling events during mating
The Wolfner group has identified two proteases found in male D. melanogaster seminal fluids that are needed …
|
| Read more... |
|
Understanding evolution of male-female communication in crickets
Different species of crickets use different mating songs, leading to the question of how genes for male mating songs are…
|
| Read more... |
Welcome to 3CPG
The Cornell Center for Comparative and Population Genomics (3CPG) is an interdisciplinary center established to foster research, education, and outreach in comparative and population genomics at Cornell University. Our mission is to:
- Promote collaboration, intellectual exchange, and a sense of community among affiliated researchers from various departments and colleges
- Help bring major new projects and grants in comparative and population genomics to Cornell
- Help recruit world-class faculty members, graduate students, and postdoctoral associates
- Support educational activities at the undergraduate, graduate, and post-graduate levels
- Improve access by researchers to shared resources and enabling technologies
Cornell has a long tradition of support for collaborative, interdisciplinary research in evolutionary biology, genetics, and mathematical biology. 3CPG was founded by the faculty with university support in 2008 to promote, support, and grow the comparative and population genomics community at Cornell, while allowing it to remain diverse and distributed across campus. The Center currently has 28 affiliated faculty members from more than a dozen departments at Cornell. These researchers have interests spanning the basic and applied sciences, and applications in agriculture, medicine, and environmental science, but they share a commitment to a comparative and evolutionary genomic approach to the study of living systems.
To receive emails regarding seminars, workshops, resources, and news relevant to comparative and population genomics at Cornell, email Evolgen_Seminars-L-request@cornell.edu with a blank subject line and the single word "join" in the body of the message.

