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This volume presents a compelling collection of state-of-the-art
work in algorithmic computational biology, honoring the legacy of
Professor Bernard M.E. Moret in this field. Reflecting the
wide-ranging influences of Prof. Moret's research, the coverage
encompasses such areas as phylogenetic tree and network estimation,
genome rearrangements, cancer phylogeny, species trees,
divide-and-conquer strategies, and integer linear programming. Each
self-contained chapter provides an introduction to a cutting-edge
problem of particular computational and mathematical interest.
Topics and features: addresses the challenges in developing
accurate and efficient software for the NP-hard maximum likelihood
phylogeny estimation problem; describes the inference of species
trees, covering strategies to scale phylogeny estimation methods to
large datasets, and the construction of taxonomic supertrees;
discusses the inference of ultrametric distances from additive
distance matrices, and the inference of ancestral genomes under
genome rearrangement events; reviews different techniques for
inferring evolutionary histories in cancer, from the use of
chromosomal rearrangements to tumor phylogenetics approaches;
examines problems in phylogenetic networks, including questions
relating to discrete mathematics, and issues of statistical
estimation; highlights how evolution can provide a framework within
which to understand comparative and functional genomics; provides
an introduction to Integer Linear Programming and its use in
computational biology, including its use for solving the Traveling
Salesman Problem. Offering an invaluable source of insights for
computer scientists, applied mathematicians, and statisticians,
this illuminating volume will also prove useful for graduate
courses on computational biology and bioinformatics.
These proceedings contain papers from the 2009 Workshop on
Algorithms in Bioinformatics (WABI), held at the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania during September 12-13,
2009. WABI 2009 was the ninth annual conference in this series,
which focuses on novel algorithms that address imp-
tantproblemsingenomics, molecularbiology,
andevolution.Theconference- phasizes research that describes
computationally e?cient algorithms and data structures that have
been implemented and tested in simulations and on real data. WABI
is sponsored by the European Association for Theoretical C- puter
Science (EATCS) and the International Society for Computational Bi-
ogy (ISCB). WABI 2009 was supported by the Penn Genome Frontiers
Institute and the Penn Center for Bioinformatics at the University
of Pennsylvania. For the 2009 conference, 90 full papers were
submitted for review by the Program Committee, and from this strong
?eld of submissions, 34 papers were chosen for presentation at the
conference and publication in the proceedings. The ?nal
programcovered a wide range of topics including gene interaction n-
works, molecular phylogeny, RNA and protein structure, and genome
evolutio
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Computing and Combinatorics - 9th Annual International Conference, COCOON 2003, Big Sky, MT, USA, July 25-28, 2003, Proceedings (Paperback, 2003 ed.)
Tandy Warnow, Binhai Zhu
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R1,646
Discovery Miles 16 460
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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The refereed proceedings of the 9th Annual International Computing and Combinatorics Conference, COCOON 2003, held in Big Sky, MT, USA in July 2003. The 52 revised full papers presented together with 3 invited contributions were carefully reviewed and selected from 114 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on computational geometry, computational biology, computability and complexity theory, graph theory and graph algorithms, automata and Petri net theory, distributed computing, Web-based computing, scheduling, graph drawing, and fixed-parameter complexity theory.
A comprehensive account of both basic and advanced material in
phylogeny estimation, focusing on computational and statistical
issues. No background in biology or computer science is assumed,
and there is minimal use of mathematical formulas, meaning that
students from many disciplines, including biology, computer
science, statistics, and applied mathematics, will find the text
accessible. The mathematical and statistical foundations of
phylogeny estimation are presented rigorously, following which more
advanced material is covered. This includes substantial chapters on
multi-locus phylogeny estimation, supertree methods, multiple
sequence alignment techniques, and designing methods for
large-scale phylogeny estimation. The author provides key
analytical techniques to prove theoretical properties about
methods, as well as addressing performance in practice for methods
for estimating trees. Research problems requiring novel
computational methods are also presented, so that graduate students
and researchers from varying disciplines will be able to enter the
broad and exciting field of computational phylogenetics.
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