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bioinformatics is research, development or application of mathematical tools and approaches for expanding the use of biological, medical, behavioral or health data. This includes methods to acquire, store, organize, archive, analyze or visualize data.
Ãâó: www.mayouminnesotapartnership.org/glossary.html
bioinformatics The discipline of obtaining information about genomic or protein sequence data. This may involve similarity searches of databases, comparing your unidentified sequence to the sequences in a database, or making predictions about the sequence based on current knowledge of similar sequences. Databases are frequently made publically available through the Internet, or locally at your institution.
Ãâó: bioinfo.cnio.es/docus/courses/SEK2003Filogenias/se...
bioinformatics the assembly of data from genomic analysis into accessible forms. It involves the application of information technology to analyze and manage large data sets resulting from gene sequencing or related techniques.
Ãâó: www.doylefoundation.org/icsu/glossary.htm
bioinformatics An interdisciplinary area at the intersection of biological, computer, and information sciences necessary to manage, process, and understand large amounts of data, for instance from the sequencing of the human genome, or from large databases containing information about plants and animals for use in discovering and developing new drugs.
Ãâó: www.isye.gatech.edu/~tg/publications/ecology/eolss...
bioinformatics The use of computers to handle biological information. The term is often used to describe computational molecular biology ?the use of computers to store, search and characterize the genetic code of genes, the proteins linked to each gene and their associated functions.
Ãâó: www.syngenta.com/en/about_syngenta/research_tech_g...
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