Proceedings IEEE International Symposium on Bio-Informatics and Biomedical Engineering
DOI: 10.1109/bibe.2000.889603
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Genomic signature is preserved in short DNA fragments

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Cited by 34 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Campbell et al (1999) compared genomic signatures of prokaryote, plasmid, and mitochondrial DNA. Deschavanne et al (2000) showed that word usage in short fragments of genomic DNA (as short as 1 kb) is similar to that of the whole genome, thus providing a strong support to the concept of genomic signature. Gentles and Karlin (2001) looked at the genomic signature of various eukaryotes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Campbell et al (1999) compared genomic signatures of prokaryote, plasmid, and mitochondrial DNA. Deschavanne et al (2000) showed that word usage in short fragments of genomic DNA (as short as 1 kb) is similar to that of the whole genome, thus providing a strong support to the concept of genomic signature. Gentles and Karlin (2001) looked at the genomic signature of various eukaryotes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Since 1995, genomic signatures have been studied from a variety of perspectives, as witnessed by Karlin et al (1997), Campbell et al (1999), Deschavanne et al (1999Deschavanne et al ( , 2000, Gentles and Karlin (2001), Sandberg et al (2001), Edwards et al (2002), and Hao et al (2000). Campbell et al (1999) compared genomic signatures of prokaryote, plasmid, and mitochondrial DNA.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In [9] Oliver et al used entropy based on density within the CGR to compare genes. Deschavanne observed that the CGR images can be viewed as a type of signature of the associated structure [10]. The authors conclude that even short segments maintain the same characteristics as does the entire species from which they come.…”
Section: Cgr Overviewmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The latter method illustrates a DNA sequence in the form of a 2D image [23][24][25], based on the Chaos Game theory [26] [27]. The method (we mean the FCGR) encodes the oligomers frequency of apparition according to given color scale; where each frequency occupies www.ijacsa.thesai.org a precise emplacement in the representation area.…”
Section: Mapping the Dna Sequences: From Character Strings Towarmentioning
confidence: 99%