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tag personalized medicine next gen sequencing reproducibility

Sons of Next Gen
Tia Ghose | Jun 1, 2012 | 8 min read
New innovations could bring tailored, fast, and cheap sequencing to the masses.
Infusion of Artificial Intelligence in Biology
Meenakshi Prabhune, PhD | Feb 23, 2024 | 10 min read
With deep learning methods revolutionizing life sciences, researchers bet on de novo proteins and cell mapping models to deliver customized precision medicines.
VAI
One Sequence, Many Variations
Van Andel Institute | Oct 5, 2022 | 5 min read
Andrew Pospisilik explores the epigenetic changes that give organisms the plasticity to change in response to their environments.
Sequence Analysis 101
Jeffrey M. Perkel | Mar 1, 2011 | 8 min read
A newbie’s guide to crunching next-generation sequencing data
2022 Top 10 Innovations 
2022 Top 10 Innovations
The Scientist | Dec 12, 2022 | 10+ min read
This year’s crop of winning products features many with a clinical focus and others that represent significant advances in sequencing, single-cell analysis, and more.
Company Offers Free Whole-Genome Sequencing for Data Sharers
Shawna Williams | Nov 15, 2018 | 2 min read
Nebula Genomics is among the first blockchain-based companies to reward users for contributing personal data for research.
Tagged for Cleansing
Michele Pagano | Jun 1, 2009 | 10+ min read
Tagged for Cleansing Not just the cell's trash and recycling center, the ubiquitin system controls complex cellular pathways with elegant simplicity and precision. By Michele Pagano have always gravitated toward order. I may even take it a bit too far according to friends who liken my office to a museum. However, I like to think it not a compulsion, but a Feng Shui approach to life. With this need for order, I may have been better suited to
Illustration showing a puzzle piece of DNA being removed
Large Scientific Collaborations Aim to Complete Human Genome
Brianna Chrisman and Jordan Eizenga | Sep 1, 2022 | 10+ min read
Thirty years out from the start of the Human Genome Project, researchers have finally finished sequencing the full 3 billion bases of a person’s genetic code. But even a complete reference genome has its shortcomings.
Sequencing On Target
Jeffrey M. Perkel | May 1, 2009 | 7 min read
By Jeffrey M. Perkel Sequencing On Target Techniques for pulling out and sequencing selected areas of the genome It's time for a genomics reality check. Despite the constant, glowing coverage of speedy, low-cost next-generation DNA sequencing, whole-genome analysis, and consumer genomics, researchers still have no idea what the vast majority of human genomic DNA does, nor the functional consequence of variations in those sequences. Thus, few researchers
Life After Sequencing
Eva Amsen | Feb 1, 2016 | 4 min read
Fifteen years after publication of the human genome’s first draft sequence, what has become of the hundreds of researchers who worked on the project?

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