Durbin's early work included developing the primary instrument software for one of the first
X-ray crystallography area detectors and the
MRC Biorad confocal microscope, alongside contributions to neural modelling. He then led the informatics for the
Caenorhabditis elegans genome project, and alongside Jean Thierry-Mieg developed the genome database
AceDB, which evolved into the
WormBase web resource. Following this he played an important role in data collection for and interpretation of the human genome sequence. These include gene finding (e.g. GeneWise) with
Ewan Birney and
Hidden Markov models for protein and nucleic acid alignment and matching (e.g.
HMMER) with
Sean Eddy and Graeme Mitchison. A standard textbook
Biological Sequence analysis coauthored with
Sean Eddy,
Anders Krogh and Graeme Mitchison describes some of this work. Using these methods Durbin worked with colleagues to build a series of important genomic data resources, including the protein family database
Pfam, the genome database
Ensembl, and the gene family database
TreeFam. More recently Durbin has returned to sequencing and has developed low coverage approaches to population genome sequencing, applied first to yeast, and has been one of the leaders in the application of new sequencing technology to study human genome variation. Durbin currently co-leads the international
1000 Genomes Project to characterise variation down to 1% allele frequency as a foundation for human genetics.
Awards and honours Durbin was a joint winner of the
Mullard Award of the Royal Society in 1994 (for work on the
confocal microscope), won the Lord Lloyd of Kilgerran Award of the
Foundation for Science and Technology in 2004, and was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2004 and a member of the
European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) in 2009. The Royal Society awarded its
Gabor Medal to Durbin in 2017 for his contributions to computational biology. In 2023 he received the
International Prize for Biology for his work on the Biology of Genomes. Durbin's certificate of election for the Royal Society reads: ==Personal life==