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Knighting in sequence biology Edward N. Trifonov Genome
classification, construction of phylogenetic trees, became today a
major approach in studying evolutionary relatedness of various
species in their vast - versity. Although the modern genome
clustering delivers the trees which are very similar to those
generated by classical means, and basic terminology is the same,
the phenotypic traits and habitats are not anymore the playground
for the classi- cation. The sequence space is the playground now.
The phenotypic traits are - placed by sequence characteristics,
"words", in particular. Matter-of-factually, the phenotype and
genotype merged, to confusion of both classical and modern p-
logeneticists. Accordingly, a completely new vocabulary of
stringology, information theory and applied mathematics took over.
And a new brand of scientists emerged - those who do know the math
and, simultaneously, (do?) know biology. The book is written by the
authors of this new brand. There is no way to test their literacy
in biology, as no biologist by training would even try to enter
into the elite circle of those who masters their almost occult
language. But the army of - formaticians, formal linguists,
mathematicians humbly (or aggressively) longing to join modern
biology, got an excellent introduction to the field of genome cl-
tering, written by the team of their kin.
Knighting in sequence biology Edward N. Trifonov Genome
classification, construction of phylogenetic trees, became today a
major approach in studying evolutionary relatedness of various
species in their vast - versity. Although the modern genome
clustering delivers the trees which are very similar to those
generated by classical means, and basic terminology is the same,
the phenotypic traits and habitats are not anymore the playground
for the classi- cation. The sequence space is the playground now.
The phenotypic traits are - placed by sequence characteristics,
"words", in particular. Matter-of-factually, the phenotype and
genotype merged, to confusion of both classical and modern p-
logeneticists. Accordingly, a completely new vocabulary of
stringology, information theory and applied mathematics took over.
And a new brand of scientists emerged - those who do know the math
and, simultaneously, (do?) know biology. The book is written by the
authors of this new brand. There is no way to test their literacy
in biology, as no biologist by training would even try to enter
into the elite circle of those who masters their almost occult
language. But the army of - formaticians, formal linguists,
mathematicians humbly (or aggressively) longing to join modern
biology, got an excellent introduction to the field of genome cl-
tering, written by the team of their kin.
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