Fr. 197.00

Bioinformatics and the Cell - Modern Computational Approaches in Genomics, Proteomics and Transcriptomics

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Biological and biomedical sciences are becoming more interdisciplinary, and scientists of the future need inte rdisciplinary training instead of the conventional disciplinary training. Just as Sean Eddy (2005) wiselypointed out that sending monolingual diplomats to the United Nations maynot enhance international collaborations, combining strictly disciplinary scientists trained in either mathematics, computational science or molecular biology will not create a productive inte rdisciplinary team ready to solve interdisciplinary problems. Molecular biology is an interdiscip linary science back in its heyday, and founders of molecular biology were ofte n interdisciplinary scientists. Indeed, Francis Crick considered himself as "a mixture of crystallographer, biophysicist, biochemist, and geneticist" (Crick, 1965). Because it was too cumbersome to explain to people that he was such a mixture, the term "molecular biologist" came handy. To get the crystallographer, biophysicist, biochemist,and geneticist within hi mself to collaborate with each other probably worked better than a team with a crystallographer, a biophysicist, a biochemist and a geneticist who maynot even be interested in each other's problems.

List of contents

Blast and Fasta.- Sequence alignment.- Contig assembly.- DNA replication and viral evolution.- Gene and motif prediction.- Hidden Markov Models.- Gibbs Sampler.- Bioinformatics and vertebrate mitochondria.- Characterizing translation efficiency.- Protein isoelectric point.- Bioinformatics and Two-Dimensional Protein Separation.- Self-Organizing Map and other clustering Algorithms.- Molecular Phylogenetics.- Fundamentals of Proteomics.

About the author










Dr. Xuhua Xia obtained his PhD in population biology at University of Western Ontario in 1990 and made his entry into molecular evolution and phylogenetics at University of Washington in 1993. He was recruited by University of Hong Kong in 1996 as an assistant professor, and served as a senior scientist and the founding head of the Bioinformatics Laboratory of HKU-Pasteur Research Centre. Dr. Xia joined University of Ottawa in 2002 where he is cross-appointed to both Biology Department and the School of Information Technology Engineering. He is an active member in the Center for Advanced Research in Environmental Genomics and the Ottawa Institute of Systems Biology. His web site is at http://dambe.bio.uottawa.ca.


Summary

Biological and biomedical sciences are becoming more interdisciplinary, and scientists of the future need inte rdisciplinary training instead of the conventional disciplinary training. Just as Sean Eddy (2005) wiselypointed out that sending monolingual diplomats to the United Nations maynot enhance international collaborations, combining strictly disciplinary scientists trained in either mathematics, computational science or molecular biology will not create a productive inte rdisciplinary team ready to solve interdisciplinary problems. Molecular biology is an interdiscip linary science back in its heyday, and founders of molecular biology were ofte n interdisciplinary scientists. Indeed, Francis Crick considered himself as “a mixture of crystallographer, biophysicist, biochemist, and geneticist” (Crick, 1965). Because it was too cumbersome to explain to people that he was such a mixture, the term “molecular biologist” came handy. To get the crystallographer, biophysicist, biochemist,and geneticist within hi mself to collaborate with each other probably worked better than a team with a crystallographer, a biophysicist, a biochemist and a geneticist who maynot even be interested in each other’s problems.

Additional text

From the reviews:
"In this book the author makes an ‘effort to render both mathematical equations and biology to numbers’. … he works out a lot of illustrative examples to make biologists understand the mathematics and computational scientists understand the biology of a wide range of problems in bioinformatics. … The book is addressed to graduate students majoring in sciences and software engineering. Biologists with a sound knowledge of computer programming should be able to implement the presented algorithms in their own programs." (Wiebke Werft, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1166, 2009)

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From the reviews:
"In this book the author makes an 'effort to render both mathematical equations and biology to numbers'. ... he works out a lot of illustrative examples to make biologists understand the mathematics and computational scientists understand the biology of a wide range of problems in bioinformatics. ... The book is addressed to graduate students majoring in sciences and software engineering. Biologists with a sound knowledge of computer programming should be able to implement the presented algorithms in their own programs." (Wiebke Werft, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1166, 2009)

Product details

Authors Xuhua Xia
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 21.10.2010
 
EAN 9781441943910
ISBN 978-1-4419-4391-0
No. of pages 350
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 21 mm
Weight 557 g
Illustrations XVI, 350 p.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Miscellaneous

C, Evolution, Life Sciences, biochemistry, bioinformatics, Proteomics, Evolutionary Biology, Biomedical and Life Sciences, Cellular biology (cytology), Biochemistry, general, Information technology: general issues, Cell Biology

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