
Bioinformatics
Description
Features: explains the fundamentals of information science relevant to biology; covers both organismal (ontogeny and phylogeny, as well as genome structure) and molecular aspects; examines the most important practical applications of bioinformatics, providing detailed descriptions of both the experimental process and the data analysis; provides a varied selection of problems throughout the book, to stimulate further thinking.
Reviews / Votes
"The book gives short introductions to many topics, providing an overview of the field and leading readers to pursue specific areas as necessary. It can serve as an excellent supplement to a textbook used in bioinformatics or computational biology courses. The audience is advanced students with backgrounds in fields associated with bioinformatics, such as genetics, biostatistics, and computer science. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and graduate students." (M. C. Pavao, Choice, Vol. 53 (11), July, 2016)
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Content
Introduction.- Part I: Information.- The Nature of Information.- The Transmission of Information.- Sets and Combinatorics.- Probability and Likelihood.- Randomness and Complexity.- Systems, Networks and Circuits.- Algorithms.- Part II: Biology.- Introduction to Part II.- The Nature of Living Things.- The Molecules of Life.- Part III: Applications.- Introduction to Part III.- Genomics.- Proteomics.- The Glycome, Lipidome and Microbiome.- Interactomics.- The Nervous System.- Metabolomics and Metabonomics.- Phenomics.- Medical Applications.- Ecosystems Management.- The Organization of Knowledge.