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The Internet for Molecular Biologists
A Practical Approach
Edited by Clare E. Sansom and Robert M. Horton
274 pages
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numerous halftones and figures
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246x189mm
978-0-19-963888-8
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Paperback
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29 January 2004
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- Essential guide for scientists written by a team of experts
- Useful descriptions of core databases to help users use PubMed, Entrez, and other databases more effectively
- Several examples of biological applications of web technologies provided
- Unlike most books that discuss online molecular biology databases which have a bioinformatics bent and some emphasis on algorithms, this volume caters to bench scientists who have a serious interest in developing skills in the use of the Internet to support their work.
- Building upon a survey of existing online resources, the authors turn to issues related to adding to this wealth of information - such as how (and why) to build a laboratory web site.
- The book includes several web resource tables
Thanks to communication technologies, and particularly the Internet, we now take immediate access to enormous quantities of information for granted. And thanks to "the new biology", building on the genome projects, some scientists are predicting that cures for the majority of known diseases could be readily available within two generations. This book aims to help the practitioners of the second revolution, the molecular biologists who are more at home at a laboratory bench than in front of a computer keyboard, to use the Internet more effectively. Sansom and Horton provide a broad introduction to using Internet based computing resources to support research in molecular
biology. After surveying the core databases and other online resources, the focus shifts to tools and techniques for exploiting and authoring Internet-distributed information. Later chapters provide detailed examples of how technologies such as molecular visualisation, VRML and XSLT can be applied to biological problems.Readership: 1) Biological and Biomedical researchers - to make better use of on-line resources; be more effective in publishing and publicising their own work on the Web.
2) Educators - to introduce students to these technologies
3) Bioinformaticians - examples of biological applications of Internet technologies
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Edited by Clare E. Sansom, School of Crystallography, Birkbeck College, London, and Robert M. Horton, Director of Research, Attotron Biosensor Corporation, USA Contributors: Barton W. Trawick, Johanna R. McEntyre, Rolf Apweiler, Rodrigo Lopez, Kim D. Pruitt, Victoria Carollo, Korbinian Strimmer, David L. Robertson, Peter D. Vize, David Atherton, Robert E. Gore-Langton, Pinar Kondu, Chin Hoon Lau, Zev Leifer, Chao Lu, James R. Woodgett, Eric Martz, Timothy Driscoll, Tomaz Amon
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Sansom: Preface
1: Bibliographic databases
2: Sequence databases and analysis sites
3: Medical genetic resources in the genome era
4: Carollo: Agricultural Biotechnology
5: Strimmer and Robertson: Inference and Applications of Molecular Phylogenies: An Introductory Guide
6: Vize: Internet tools for cell and developmental biologists
7: Atherton, Gore-Langton, Kondu, Hoon Lau and leifer: Internet Collaboration
8: Lu and Woodgett: Laboratory web sites: how to disseminate information, make friends and influence people
9: Martz and Driscoll: Introduction to Macromolecular Visualization
10: Amon: Biological Applications of Virtual Reality
11: Horton: Web scripting for Molecular Biologists: an Introduction to PERL and XML
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All the resources you need to teach your children the 44 sounds in a dynamic and fast paced way.
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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