Barend Mons
Netherlands Bioinformatics Center
Biosemantics Group, Department of Medical Informatics, Erasmus Medical Center,
Rotterdam
Department of Human Genetics, Leiden University Medical Center
Dr. Barend Mons (1957, The Netherlands) obtained his MSc. (1981, Cum Laude)
and his PhD. (1986) at the University of Leiden, The Netherlands, majoring in
Cell and Molecular Biology.
He then performed over a decade of fundamental research on the genetic
differentiation of malaria parasites and he published over 45 peer reviewed
scientific papers on that topic. Much of this research was conducted in close
partnership with colleagues from malaria-endemic (developing) countries. For his
pioneering research on the in vitro culture and differentiation of rodent and
human malaria parasites he received the Eyckman medal from the Netherlands
Society for Tropical Medicine.
During that period he was awarded as PI or co-proposer on a range of Dutch
grants (NWO, DGIS) EC (INCO-DC) and international grants (WHO).
Barend has always been strongly entrepreneurial as a researcher. In his ‘First
Leiden Period’ he developed culture systems for rodent malaria parasites and he
was scientific co-founder of the company KREATECH-biotechnology.
In 1996 Barend was invited to assist the European Commissions as a Seconded
National Expert with the task to develop and support international scientific
networks, again, especially with developing countries as partners. During this
‘Science Management Period’ Barend became a driving force behind several other
international initiatives, including the European Malaria Vaccine Initiative,
the African Malaria Network Trust (AMANET) and the Multilateral Initiative on
Malaria. In that period he also served as the Chairman of the Malaria
Foundation. He became intrigued by the opportunities and challenges of
international and multilingual networking in the context of the emerging Web
technologies. He founded one of the first electronic interactive communication
systems for science networking with developing countries, SHARED, for which he
started to (co-)design thesaurus based concept extraction technologies in order
to match across languages and jargon, with the Erasmus University of Rotterdam
as the major partner. In 1999 he returned to the Netherlands and joined the
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (The National research Council,
NWO) as a senior adviser on International Health Research. He was one of the
founders in 1999 of the company Collexis, commercializing the technology
developed originally by Barend and his colleague Dr. Erik van Mulligen for
SHARED. As an instrument to enrol the technology under affordable conditions in
developing countries, he founded a not-for profit equivalent of Collexis,
IntellectuAll.
At present, since 2002 Barend is Associate Professor in Bio-Semantics at the
Department of Medical Informatics, Erasmus Medical Centre, University of
Rotterdam and (since 2005) at the Department of Human Genetics at the Leiden
University Medical Centre, both in The Netherlands. However, he remained
involved in International Scientific Management and Networking at various levels.
He was one of the Founding Trustees of The Centre for the Management of
Intellectual Property in Health Research and Development (MIHR), which assists
people in Developing countries to manage their critical IP for the betterment of
Society. He also serves on the board of Knewco, Inc. (co-founded by Barend in
2005).
His present activities mainly focus on International networking to realise a
completely new form of Computer Assisted Distributed Annotation and on-line
Knowledge discovery, in close collaboration between Rotterdam, Leiden and Knewco,
and largely based on the Knewco Knowlet™ technology combined with Open Access
and Open Source Wiki-technology approaches.
