ICCB 2023, Vienna

I’ve been attending ICCB, the 10th (X) International Conference on Computational Bioengineering in Vienna, Austria, this last week.

Among all the talks about blood, cells, and organs, there were plenty of sessions in honour of the great mineralized tissue of vertebrates, bone. In fact I was here specially to attend a session with the title: Multiscale assessment of bone remodeling and adaptation using novel experimental and computational methods.

This mini-symposium was dedicated to my late father, Prof John Clement (former Chair in Forensic Odontology, University of Melbourne, Australia). Dad was a scientist who worked across many disciplines, one of which was tissue science with a focus understanding bone tissue at different scales.

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I was honoured to have been considered and accepted to speak in this session, and gave a talk highlighting how myself and colleagues are using novel imaging methods, like CT scanning, to image palaeontological bones over the fish-tetrapod transition. It was an incredibly difficult presentation to give but I hope Dad would have been proud.

The best thing about it all was to see so many of Dad’s old colleagues, students and friends, and hear from several others who had collaborated with him. His scientific legacy lives on with much research still being done in particular on the Melbourne Femur Collection, which he initiated.

Many people reminisced with fond or funny memories about him, and several people noted how good he was at bringing people together.  And even five years since he died, he was still bringing scientists from all over the word to Vienna to talk all about bone. I’m sure he would have enjoyed the sessions immensely if he could have been here. Huge thanks to the symposium organisers, Peter Pivonka, Rita Hardiman, David Cooper & David Thomas, for making it happen.