Sciweavers
Explore
Publications
Books
Software
Tutorials
Presentations
Lectures Notes
Datasets
Labs
Conferences
Community
Upcoming
Conferences
Top Ranked Papers
Most Viewed Conferences
Conferences by Acronym
Conferences by Subject
Conferences by Year
Tools
PDF Tools
Image Tools
Text Tools
OCR Tools
Symbol and Emoji Tools
On-screen Keyboard
Latex Math Equation to Image
Smart IPA Phonetic Keyboard
Community
Sciweavers
About
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Cookies
Free Online Productivity Tools
i2Speak
i2Symbol
i2OCR
iTex2Img
iWeb2Print
iWeb2Shot
i2Type
iPdf2Split
iPdf2Merge
i2Bopomofo
i2Arabic
i2Style
i2Image
i2PDF
iLatex2Rtf
Sci2ools
114
Voted
RECOMB
2005
Springer
135
views
Computational Biology
»
more
RECOMB 2005
»
Motif Discovery Through Predictive Modeling of Gene Regulation
16 years 3 months ago
Download
www.biopathways.org
Manuel Middendorf, Anshul Kundaje, Mihir Shah, Yoa
Real-time Traffic
Computational Biology
|
Predictive Modeling
|
RECOMB 2005
|
claim paper
Related Content
»
Evaluation of phylogenetic footprint discovery for predicting bacterial cisregulatory elem...
»
Correlating overrepresented upstream motifs to gene expression a computational approach to...
»
A Combined Model and a Varied Gibbs Sampling Algorithm Used for Motif Discovery
»
Uncovering mechanisms of transcriptional regulations by systematic mining of cis regulator...
»
Combining Comparative Genomics with de novo Motif Discovery to Identify Human Transcriptio...
»
WeederH an algorithm for finding conserved regulatory motifs and regions in homologous seq...
»
cisRegulatory Element Prediction in Mammalian Genomes
»
Bioinformatic identification of novel putative photoreceptor specific ciselements
»
Principal component analysis for predicting transcriptionfactor binding motifs from arrayd...
more »
Post Info
More Details (n/a)
Added
03 Dec 2009
Updated
03 Dec 2009
Type
Conference
Year
2005
Where
RECOMB
Authors
Manuel Middendorf, Anshul Kundaje, Mihir Shah, Yoav Freund, Chris Wiggins, Christina S. Leslie
Comments
(0)
Researcher Info
Computational Biology Study Group
Computer Vision