About Our Approach and Contact:
We analyze biological sequences using digital signal (FFT)-based and source-verified computations.
Our research focuses on three pillars :
-Sequence-based Modeling: Each step starts with the retrieval of the biological sequences, which are translated into signals.
-Transparent Computation: Each step is visible, traceable and reproducible allowing user to follow the workflow with confidence.
-Accessible Scientific Knowledge: Our methods are written for students, educators and researchers who need clarity.
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Founder’s Note
CADRC‑Initiative was created to make computational biology transparent, accessible, and reproducible. As the inventor of the Computer‑Aided Drug Resistance Calculator (US11227669B2), my goal has always been to not only quantify but calculate biological features using computerized approaches and making the procedures transparent and accessible.
Our work begins with the biological sequence itself. By translating sequences into analyzable signals, we expose the structural logic, constraints, and functional behaviors encoded within them. Every workflow we build is designed to be traceable, source‑verified, and open to learners, so that students, educators, and researchers can follow the full computational pathway with confidence.
Dallas is our scientific home. From here, we are building a lifelong institution dedicated to mechanistic modeling, open computation, and accessible scientific education — a place where biological meaning is derived from data in a way that is clear, reproducible, and grounded in the underlying mechanism.
— Norbert Nwankwo, PhD
Founder, CADRC‑Initiative.
Contact
CADRC Initiative — Felbex Research Program
Dallas, Texas.
Email: contact@cadrc-initiative.org