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Bioinformatics software for biologists in the genomics era
Journal Article
Reference:
S. Kumar, J. Dudley. BIOINFORMATICS, 23, 14, 1713-1717. Published in 2007.
Abstract:

Motivation: The genome sequencing revolution is approaching a
landmark figure of 1000 completely sequenced genomes. Coupled
with fast-declining, per-base sequencing costs, this influx of DNA
sequence data has encouraged laboratory scientists to engage large
datasets in comparative sequence analyses for making evolutionary,
functional and translational inferences. However, the majority of the scientists at the forefront of experimental research are not
bioinformaticians, so a gap exists between the user-friendly software
needed and the scripting/programming infrastructure often employed for the analysis of large numbers of genes, long genomic segments and groups of sequences. We see an urgent need for the expansion of the fundamental paradigms under which biologist-friendly software tools are designed and developed to fulfill the needs of biologists to analyze large datasets by using sophisticated computational methods. We argue that the design principles need to be sensitive to the reality that comparatively small teams of biologists have historically developed some of the most popular
biological software packages in molecular evolutionary analysis.
Furthermore, biological intuitiveness and investigator empowerment
need to take precedence over the current supposition that biologists
should re-tool and become programmers when analyzing genome scale datasets.

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Information last updated: Thu Sep 27 2007
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Stanford School of Medicine