In a normal computational context for biomedical information evaluation, DNA sequence classification is a vital problem. A number of machine studying methods have used to finish this job lately efficiently. Identification and classification of viruses are important to keep away from an outbreak like COVID-19. Regardless, the characteristic choice course of stays probably the most […]
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The WM-q multiple exact string matching algorithm for DNA sequences
The string matching algorithms are among the essential fields in computer science, such as text search, intrusion detection systems, fraud detection, sequence search in bioinformatics. The exact string matching algorithms are divided into two parts: single and multiple. Multiple string matching algorithms involve finding elements of the pattern set P in a given input text […]
Oral fixation
This morning I was on my back counting dots in the ceiling tile while a pleasant woman repeatedly asked me to turn my head toward her and Sheryl Crow quietly insisted that a change would do me good. (Ach, Honey, don’t I know it.) Alas, it’s not what you’re thinking. As the pleasant woman poked […]
An open mind
The fact that Saks waited until she was 51 (!) before “coming out” as a schizophrenic says something to me about the biggest potential stigmas attached to personal genomics. As uptight as we Americans are about sex, we seem to be even more hung up on brains. Jim Watson (whose own son, incidentally, has schizophrenia), […]
Warts and all
Well, this is the thing. Correct me if I’m wrong, my board-certified brothers and sisters, but my sense is that for most highly heritable conditions there are few meaningful treatments. Even if that’s no longer the case for Alzheimer’s (and I’m no neurologist, but I have serious doubts), I don’t think anyone would dispute the […]
Children of men
A friend asked me about my decision to enroll in the PGP and the effect it might have on my two kids. By releasing my genome, he wanted to know, am I potentially limiting my children’s claim to privacy? The short answer is yes. “Personal” implies it’s only about you, the sequencee. But you don’t have to […]
Hello, Cleveland
Welcome to genomeboy.com. Here are some throat-clearing preliminaries and disclaimers: My name is Misha Angrist. I am a recovering geneticist with a PhD from a once-proud institution that changes presidents with alarming regularity. I am also a writer. A meditation on genomics and intellectual property can be found here, a twee short story here and, […]