Zobrazeno 1 - 3
of 3
pro vyhledávání: '"Jennifer I. Deegan"'
Autor:
John Day Richter, Rex L. Chisholm, Carol J. Bult, Petra Fey, Michael S. Livstone, Susan Bromberg, Evelyn Camon, Suzanna E. Lewis, Janan T. Eppig, Emily Dimmer, Mary Shimoyama, Ni Li, Rose Oughtred, Rolf Apweiler, Stuart R. Miyasato, Edith D. Wong, Tanya Z. Berardini, Maria C. Costanzo, Christopher J. Mungall, David P. Hill, Ruth C. Lovering, Valerie Wood, Marek S. Skrzypek, Jodi E. Hirschman, J. Michael Cherry, Li Donghui, Seth Carbon, Jennifer R. Wortman, Kara Dolinski, Giorgio Valle, Kathy K. Zhu, Susan Tweedie, Shane C. Burgess, Stacia R. Engel, Trudy Torto Alalibo, Paul W. Sternberg, Fiona M. McCarthy, Pankaj Jaiswal, Doug Howe, Ranjana Kishore, Jennifer I. Deegan, Warren A. Kibbe, Gail Binkley, Simon N. Twigger, Harold J. Drabkin, Erika Feltrin, Martin Aslett, Qing Dong, Matthew Berriman, David Botstein, Victoria Petri, Pascale Gaudet, Candace Collmer, Shuai Weng, Cynthia J. Krieger, Linda Hannick, Dianna G. Fisk, Robert S. Nash, Rachael P. Huntley, Nicola Mulder, Jennifer L. Smith, Sue Povey, Seung Y. Rhee, Stan Laulederkind, Benjamin C. Hitz, Julie Park, Howard J. Jacob, Midori A. Harris, Michelle G. Giglio, Judith A. Blake, Martin Ringwald, Erich M. Schwarz, Daniel Barrell, Rama Balakrishnan, Alexander D. Diehl, Trent E. Seigfried, Amelia Ireland, Eurie L. Hong, Jane Lomax, Karen Eilbeck, Michael Ashburner, Karen R. Christie, Kimberly Van Auken, Mary E. Dolan, Varsha K. Khodiyar, Monte Westerfield
Publikováno v:
Nucleic Acids Research
The Gene Ontology (GO) project (http://www.geneontology.org/) provides a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for community use in annotating genes, gene products and sequences (also see http://www.sequenceontology.org/). The ontologies have be
Autor:
Michael Bada, Tanya Z. Berardini, Jane Lomax, Midori A. Harris, Jennifer I. Deegan, Amelia Ireland, Christopher J. Mungall, David P. Hill
Publikováno v:
Nature Precedings
The Gene Ontology (GO) consists of nearly 30,000 classes for describing the activities and locations of gene products. Manual maintenance of ontology of this size is a considerable effort, and errors and inconsistencies inevitably arise. Reasoners ca
Publikováno v:
BMC Bioinformatics, Vol 11, Iss 1, p 530 (2010)
BMC Bioinformatics
BMC Bioinformatics
Background The Gene Ontology project supports categorization of gene products according to their location of action, the molecular functions that they carry out, and the processes that they are involved in. Although the ontologies are intentionally d