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Bayesian Analysis of Trees With Internal Node Generation: Bayesian inference, demographic history, population splits: I. J. Wilson, Weale, D.Balding BayesPhylogenies [8] Bayesian inference of trees using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods: Bayesian inference, multiple models, mixture model (auto-partitioning) M. Pagel, A. Meade BayesTraits [9]
PLINK [1] is a free, commonly used, open-source whole-genome association analysis toolset designed by Shaun Purcell. The software is designed flexibly to perform a wide range of basic, large-scale genetic analyses. PLINK currently supports following functionalities: data management;
FASDA (Fast And Simple Differential Analysis) is a fast and memory-efficient differential analysis tool written in C, following object-oriented design and strict code-quality practices. It takes SAM/BAM/CRAM or kallisto abundance files directly as input, and produces fold-changes and exact P-values for up to 5 replicates, near-exact P-values ...
Alignment Editor ― Within MEGA, the Alignment Editor is a tool that may be used for editing and building multiple sequence alignments. The Alignment Editor in MEGA includes an integrated tool for both ClustalW and MUSCLE programs. All actions take place in the Analysis Explorer, which can be found in the main menu of MEGA.
Mondrian – data analysis tool using interactive statistical graphics with a link to R; Neurophysiological Biomarker Toolbox – Matlab toolbox for data-mining of neurophysiological biomarkers; OpenBUGS; OpenEpi – A web-based, open-source, operating-independent series of programs for use in epidemiology and statistics based on JavaScript and ...
Asahikawa (旭川市, Asahikawa-shi) is a city in Kamikawa Subprefecture, Hokkaido, Japan. It is the capital of the subprefecture, and the second-largest city in Hokkaido, after Sapporo. [1] [2] It has been a core city since April 1, 2000. The city is currently well known for the Asahiyama Zoo, the Asahikawa ramen and a Ski resort city.
Tech reporter Kara Swisher is working towards assembling a group of investors to purchase The Washington Post from billionaire Jeff Bezos.
Tajima's D is a population genetic test statistic created by and named after the Japanese researcher Fumio Tajima. [1] Tajima's D is computed as the difference between two measures of genetic diversity: the mean number of pairwise differences and the number of segregating sites, each scaled so that they are expected to be the same in a neutrally evolving population of constant size.