Hi, I’m Siamak Amirtaheri Afshar, a biotechnology graduate (B.S. in Biotechnology) with a strong interest in bioinformatics and computational life sciences. I have presented my work as an oral presentation at an international biomedical congress, an experience that further strengthened my passion for rigorous and impactful scientific research.
From the very beginning of my academic journey, my motivation has never been limited to earning degrees or titles. Instead, I am driven by a deep curiosity to understand how life works at its most fundamental levels—and how this understanding can be transformed into practical solutions that genuinely improve human health. This mindset led me beyond classical biotechnology into interdisciplinary areas such as bioinformatics, chemoinformatics, computational analysis, and molecular-level engineering.
I am particularly fascinated by the integration of genetics, nanotechnology, and biomedical engineering, and by the idea that complex diseases like cancer can be approached not only as problems to eliminate, but as systems to understand, re-engineer, and ultimately control. I see science as a dynamic and learnable system, where meaningful progress emerges through synthesis rather than isolation.
My long-term goal is to contribute to the development of adaptable biomedical platforms—spanning areas such as cancer research, protein engineering, nanomedicine, and data-driven biology—that can be applied across multiple diseases and research domains. I believe that with the right tools, mentorship, and interdisciplinary vision, complex scientific questions can evolve into real-world innovations.
All skill-related certificates have been uploaded and can be accessed via the link below:
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:The paper submitted to the 2023 International Biomedical Congress is available at the link below
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I initiated this project primarily as a personal challenge—to objectively evaluate my own scientific and analytical skills and to determine whether they were truly capable of producing academically valuable outcomes.
The successful submission of this paper and its inclusion in the official congress archive served as a meaningful confirmation of that effort.
