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Human Genome Informatics: Translating Genes into Health examines the most commonly used electronic tools for translating genomic information into clinically meaningful formats.… Read more
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Immediately download your ebook while waiting for your print delivery. No promo code needed.
Human Genome Informatics: Translating Genes into Health examines the most commonly used electronic tools for translating genomic information into clinically meaningful formats. By analyzing and comparing interpretation methods of whole genome data, the book discusses the possibilities of their application in genomic and translational medicine. Topics such as electronic decision-making tools, translation algorithms, interpretation and translation of whole genome data for rare diseases are thoroughly explored. In addition, discussions of current human genome databases and the possibilities of big data in genomic medicine are presented.
With an updated approach on recent techniques and current human genomic databases, the book is a valuable source for students and researchers in genome and medical informatics. It is also ideal for workers in the bioinformatics industry who are interested in recent developments in the field.
Graduate, doctoral and post-doctoral researchers in genome informatics and medical informatics; workers / representatives from bioinformatics companies and diagnostic laboratories interested in establishing informatics approaches to translate and interpret their findings
1. Human Genome Informatics: Coming of Age2. Creating Transparent and Reproducible Pipelines: Best Practices for Tools, Data, and 3. How Cytogenetics Paradigms Shape Decision Making in Translational Genomics4. An Introduction to Tools, Databases, and Practical Guidelines for NGS Data Analysis5. Proteomics and Metabolomics Data Analysis for Translational Medicine6. Incentives for Human Genome Variation Data Sharing7. A Review of Tools to Automatically Infer Chromosomal Positions From dbSNP and HGVS Genetic Variants8. Translating Genomic Information to Rationalize Drug Use9. Minimum Information Required for Pharmacogenomics Experiments10. Human Genomic Databases in Translational Medicine11. Artificial Intelligence: The Future Landscape of Genomic Medical Diagnosis: Dataset, In Silico Artificial Intelligent Clinical Information, and Machine Learning Systems12. Genomics England: The Future of Genomic Medical Diagnosis: Governmental Scale Clinical Sequencing and Potential Walled-Garden Impact on Global Data Sharing
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George P. Patrinos is a Professor of Pharmacogenomics and Pharmaceutical Biotechnology in the University of Patras (Greece), Department of Pharmacy, and Head of Division of Pharmacology and Biosciences of the same department and holds adjunct Full Professorships at Erasmus MC, Faculty of Medicine, and Health Sciences, Rotterdam (the Netherlands), and the United Arab Emirates University, College of Medicine, Department of Genetics and Genomics, Al-Ain (UAE). Also, from 2018 until the end of 2024, he was Chair of the Global Genomic Medicine Collaborative (G2MC). He served 12.5 years as a full member and Greece’s National representative in the CHMP Pharmacogenomics Working Party of the European Medicines Agency (EMA). George has more than 340 publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals, some of them in leading scientific journals, such as The Lancet, Nature Genetics, Nature Reviews Genetic, Nucleic Acids Research, Genes & Development. He has also coauthored and coedited more than 15 textbooks, among which the renowned textbook Molecular Diagnostics, published by Academic Press, now in its 3rd edition, while he is the editor of Translational and Applied Genomics book series, published by Elsevier. Furthermore, he serves as the Editor-In-Chief of the prestigious Pharmacogenomics Journal (TPJ), published by Nature Publishing Group, Associate Editor, and member of the editorial board of several scientific journals, and advisory and evaluation committees. Apart from that, George is the main coorganizer of the Golden Helix Conferences, an international meeting series on Pharmacogenomics and Genomic Medicine with more than 50 conferences organized in more than 25 countries worldwide.