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1 ocess with the assistance of domain experts (geneticists).
2 lymorphisms is a powerful tool for the plant geneticist.
3  helped engender a unique and valuable plant geneticist.
4 ial concern to both evolutionary and medical geneticists.
5 ldren with undiagnosed syndromes to clinical geneticists.
6 ny of the quantitative traits of interest to geneticists.
7 s largely unknown among insect developmental geneticists.
8  cottonseed has been a long-standing goal of geneticists.
9 lready brought insights to human and medical geneticists.
10 ention of developmental biologists and human geneticists.
11 listic data meets a long-standing need among geneticists.
12 e continues to be a formidable challenge for geneticists.
13 other affliction visited by statisticians on geneticists.
14 ding its effects is an important task facing geneticists.
15 pes, has long been of interest to population geneticists.
16 terials, and information from other academic geneticists.
17 y become tarnished in the view of many human geneticists.
18 e study of epistasis is of great interest to geneticists.
19 analysis by historians, anthropologists, and geneticists.
20 ges in their gene dosage has long fascinated geneticists.
21 nd physiological phenotypes studied by human geneticists.
22 athologists, hematologists, oncologists, and geneticists.
23 n phenotypes is a major goal of contemporary geneticists.
24 " was published by four prominent Drosophila geneticists.
25 ese genes, and ratings from 24 schizophrenia geneticists.
26 netic methods has long been a goal of vector geneticists.
27 es a grand and unprecedented opportunity for geneticists.
28 ve the skills of evolutionary biologists and geneticists.
29  radiologists, pathologists, oncologists and geneticists.
30 of the 20th century by a consortium of yeast geneticists.
31 e, making the diallel unapproachable to many geneticists.
32  to the diagnostic armamentarium of clinical geneticists.
33 recent developments proposed by quantitative geneticists.
34 of ophthalmic oncologists, pathologists, and geneticists.
35 r sick, an observation that has puzzled many geneticists.
36 hese findings into useful tools for clinical geneticists.
37 el by behavioral ecologists and quantitative geneticists.
38 What does a Bayesian framework have to offer geneticists?
39 dents were physician geneticist (41%), Ph.D. geneticist (30%), and genetic counselor (18%); 72% of th
40 jor categories of respondents were physician geneticist (41%), Ph.D. geneticist (30%), and genetic co
41 hose answering yes included 44% of physician geneticists, 53% of Ph.D. geneticists, and 31% of geneti
42 May 1 through November 30, 2015, by clinical geneticists after referral from general and subspecialis
43                     Molecular biologists and geneticists alike now acknowledge that most common human
44 to be revisited by ecologists and population geneticists alike.
45  the premise put forth by another preeminent geneticist and evolutionary biologist, Theodosius Dobzha
46           Fred Sherman was a prominent yeast geneticist and my mentor in graduate school.
47                          Barbara McClintock, geneticist and recipient of the 1983 Nobel Prize in Phys
48 alled for, referral can be made to a medical geneticist and/or a medical genetics clinic.
49 w is designed as a handbook for the nonmouse geneticist and/or junior investigator to permit the succ
50                                     Although geneticists and archaeologists continue to make progress
51 ant data is no longer limited to clinicians, geneticists and bioinformaticians, however; ongoing comm
52 equire close collaboration among clinicians, geneticists and bioinformaticians.
53 ansformed the way that molecular biologists, geneticists and bioinformaticists analyze genomic data.
54 m collections is a long-standing problem for geneticists and breeders.
55    All mutations were evaluated by molecular geneticists and clinicians in the context of the patient
56  for interdisciplinary collaboration between geneticists and cognitive neuroscientists, 2) the likeli
57 lso be of great utility for medical/clinical geneticists and collectively many genetic variants can r
58 res of genetic medicine and >/=1600 clinical geneticists and diagnostic laboratory scientists.
59                                              Geneticists and epidemiologists often observe that certa
60                            After adjustment, geneticists and gynecologists were less likely than medi
61 omic analysis will become a standard tool of geneticists and has the potential to revolutionize the f
62 analyzed a subsample of 1240 self-identified geneticists and made a limited number of comparisons wit
63                                More recently geneticists and molecular biologists trying to better un
64  most useful to two kinds of readers: fungal geneticists and molecular biologists who are interested
65 studies, and the pioneering efforts of mouse geneticists and neuroscientists to identify and clone ge
66 apps will be important tools for biologists, geneticists and physicians to review content while parti
67  genes, have also become a focus of study to geneticists and reproductive biologists interested in fe
68                               For >40 years, geneticists and science historians have appealed to the
69 h attention from the media, and referrals to geneticists and surgeons, and requests for genetic testi
70              In 1939, English mathematician, geneticist, and psychiatrist Lionel Sharples Penrose hyp
71 d 44% of physician geneticists, 53% of Ph.D. geneticists, and 31% of genetic counselors; answers were
72 pe correlation is essential if pathologists, geneticists, and clinicians are to interpret the growing
73 flects a consensus among hematopathologists, geneticists, and clinicians regarding both updates to cu
74 se we created as a resource for researchers, geneticists, and clinicians.
75 discuss views of genetic counselors, medical geneticists, and counselees on specific issues, and docu
76 at interest to human geneticists, population geneticists, and evolutionists, but remains incompletely
77 bers of the GI oncology community, molecular geneticists, and genetic counselors.
78 es, active collaboration of neurologists and geneticists, and investigation of affected families), bu
79 vorite tool of biochemists, epidemiologists, geneticists, and molecular biologists as well as clinici
80 d fruitful collaboration between clinicians, geneticists, and physiologists.
81             The collaboration of clinicians, geneticists, and renal physiologists has enabled us to b
82                                    The human geneticist Archibald Garrod noted in 1931 that, "It is,
83  surveys of population structure, population geneticists are able to select loci to use in population
84 reasingly clear to the statistics community; geneticists are also finding this framework useful and a
85                                    Molecular geneticists are developing the third-generation human ge
86 dopt the approach of whole-genome screening, geneticists are faced with the challenge of having to in
87 ine scale, evolutionary biologists and human geneticists are increasingly exploiting linkage disequil
88                                         Most geneticists are taught classical statistics, which inclu
89                                        Human geneticists are well placed to coordinate a systematic e
90 te since the early 20(th) century, such that geneticists argue both for and against polygenic inherit
91 ar biology has brought many new tools to the geneticist as well as an exponentially expanding databas
92                  Although pioneered by human geneticists as a potential solution to the challenging p
93 abase is intended to support both population geneticists as well as clinicians undertaking the task t
94 designs are in common use among evolutionary geneticists, as well as among plant and animal breeders.
95                               Of 402 Chinese geneticists asked to participate, 255 (63%) returned by
96                           To help interested geneticists avoid duplicating efforts and make use of ex
97 s importance in development, T has intrigued geneticists because of its association with the mouse t-
98 sions have been of long-standing interest to geneticists because they are capable of suppressing reco
99 am members also serve the community of maize geneticists by lending technical support for community a
100 ture has changed the types of studies canine geneticists can undertake.
101  Results were reported by clinical molecular geneticists certified by the American Board of Medical G
102 niques, and resources available to the Ciona geneticist, citing examples of studies that employed suc
103                                 Evolutionary geneticists commonly try to explain this paradox with me
104 in most human populations, the ways in which geneticists conceptualize the relationship between racia
105    Yet despite this belief, many statistical geneticists continue applying, in slightly new and diffe
106                                Developmental geneticists' contribution to the study of the evolution
107 through computer simulation, may help cancer geneticists design efficient experiments and formulate h
108 ious meetings, brought together biochemists, geneticists, developmental and tissue biologists interes
109 mapping has been a major challenge for plant geneticists due to the lack of techniques that are widel
110 plex traits poses a particular challenge for geneticists due to the large sample sizes and large numb
111 falciparum present a challenge to population geneticists due to their extreme diversity, which is gen
112 ntroversies that have preoccupied population geneticists during this time (and were often hotly debat
113                Collaboration among molecular geneticists, ecologists and bioinformaticians promises t
114 iminary diagnosis to an experienced clinical geneticist even before a clinical examination and genoty
115 erscores the desirability of evaluation by a geneticist for all individuals with anophthalmia and mic
116 fts to inbreeding has intrigued evolutionary geneticists for decades.
117 x trait, has been of fundamental interest to geneticists for decades.
118 itative traits has been of great interest to geneticists for many decades, and many statistical metho
119 tive evolution, which satisfied quantitative geneticists for over 50 years, has been modified in the
120 ill provide an important resource to soybean geneticists for quantitative trait locus discovery and m
121        Adult and pediatric nephrologists and geneticists from four continents whose clinical practice
122 ve ophthalmic oncologists, pathologists, and geneticists from retinoblastoma referral centers located
123 ly conserved membrane traffic pathway, yeast geneticists generated tools for microbiologists and immu
124      Skeptics among both epidemiologists and geneticists have argued that genomic research adds littl
125                                 Quantitative geneticists have become interested in the heritability o
126                                              Geneticists have been interested in inbreeding and inbre
127 he post-genomics era, molecular evolutionary geneticists have come to possess the molecular, statisti
128                           Classically cancer geneticists have concentrated on genomic changes and hav
129                                 Evolutionary geneticists have expended tremendous effort to estimate
130                                     Although geneticists have extensively debated the mode by which a
131 logy in the early 20th century, evolutionary geneticists have for the most part treated genes and mut
132         Here we discuss how neuroimagers and geneticists have formed alliances to discover how geneti
133                                              Geneticists have found that more than one clinical syndr
134                                              Geneticists have had for many years a protocol to identi
135                                 Evolutionary geneticists have increasingly used sequence variation in
136                                              Geneticists have long sought the ability to manipulate v
137                                   Population geneticists have long sought to estimate the distributio
138                                              Geneticists have long sought to identify the genetic cha
139 e tasks common to statistical and population geneticists have not been created yet.
140                               For many years geneticists have relied on conditional activation to stu
141                                     Although geneticists have shown that populations tend to stratify
142 olonized from the Americas (Heyerdahl 1950), geneticists have sought--but have not found--any evidenc
143                                   Drosophila geneticists have uncovered roles for microRNAs in the co
144                                              Geneticists have usually approached this problem by tryi
145 m the very beginning of my work as a Medical Geneticist I have composed personal "algorithms" to piec
146 on of maize has been developed to help plant geneticists identify sequence variants affecting importa
147          The combined efforts of clinicians, geneticists, immunologists and cell biologists are produ
148 utions to the increased number of population geneticists in several European countries).
149 ms of interventionalists, cardiologists, and geneticists in tertiary centers with expertise in managi
150  recognized as the greatest challenge facing geneticists in the twenty-first century.
151                              It explores how geneticists in the United States accommodated these disr
152 andidate genes to be considered could assist geneticists in their hunt for disease genes, particularl
153 l subpopulations are less precise than most (geneticists included) expect, because that is usually ba
154                                              Geneticists increasingly study tobacco use as a model fo
155 l practices of ophthalmologists and clinical geneticists internationally.
156  The past decade has been a fruitful one for geneticists involved in Parkinson's disease (PD) researc
157  One of the greatest challenges facing human geneticists is the identification and characterization o
158 ches completion, the challenge for mammalian geneticists is to develop approaches for the systematic
159        The "NPD ratio," widely used by yeast geneticists, is of limited applicability and is prone to
160                                    For human geneticists, it is expected that Drosophila studies will
161 introduced into the literature by the German geneticist Ludwig Plate in 1910, 100 years ago.
162 oes so by focusing on the career and life of geneticist Masuo Kodani, who, as a Japanese American, fo
163 that can combine the expertise of population geneticists, multispecialty oncologists, molecular epide
164                                              Geneticists need new user-friendly computer programs tha
165                                              Geneticists need to appreciate that some deaf persons ma
166 ilability of ethics training and support for geneticists, nurses, and counsellors.
167 nary/organismal biologists and developmental geneticists often preclude an effective merging of disci
168 quired to use these cutting-edge techniques, geneticists often revert to simpler, less powerful metho
169 o were assisted by genetic counselors, nurse geneticists, or others (v counseling by themselves), tho
170      Thirty years ago, a group of population geneticists performed a series of mark-and-recapture exp
171 mental scientists with molecular biologists, geneticists, physiologists and physician scientists are
172 SNP) variation is of great interest to human geneticists, population geneticists, and evolutionists,
173                           However, molecular geneticists propose an aging process that is programmed
174 ad a major influence on the statistician and geneticist R. A.Fisher at the time he was a mathematics
175 ished with an experienced team consisting of geneticists, radiologists, endocrinologists, pathologist
176                                              Geneticists rated PCP management of 8 MDR results (73% [
177                         A panel of clinician-geneticists rated the appropriateness of how PCPs manage
178                                Today, cancer geneticists recognize seven clinically distinct, inherit
179                              Initially, worm geneticists relied exclusively on a classical genetics a
180                                   Population geneticists remain unsure of the forces driving the evol
181 ause they were denied access to data, 28% of geneticists reported that they had been unable to confir
182                              Biochemists and geneticists, represented by Doug and Bill in classic ess
183 appa = 0.70; correlation = 0.77) between the geneticist's breast cancer risk assessments based on com
184  and age at diagnosis of cancers; and cancer geneticist's risk assessment were compared for 120 pairs
185                   One of the top things on a geneticist's wish list has to be a set of mutants for ev
186                       Thirty-five percent of geneticists said that sharing had decreased during the l
187  loci has been shown to be a useful tool for geneticists searching for disease genes.
188                                              Geneticists seek out markers of domestication in the gen
189                                              Geneticists seeking to understand HIV-1 evolution among
190 examine forensic genetics and argue that all geneticists should anticipate the ethical and social iss
191 wide association studies are finally leading geneticists straight to the genetic susceptibility facto
192                                              Geneticists study the gene; however, for epigeneticists,
193  up or down regulated in cancers, expression geneticists study their function in the context of gene
194           Although the prevailing view among geneticists suggests that recombination hotspots exist u
195 new genotyping technologies, has given human geneticists the tools necessary to comprehensively, and
196           The estimate is used by population geneticists to characterize population structure, by eco
197 etic markers in nonmodel systems has allowed geneticists to construct linkage maps for a diversity of
198 nkage information of coupling phase have led geneticists to construct two separate but related linkag
199  the genome is sufficient to allow molecular geneticists to correctly identify promoter sequences for
200 matics resources for plant physiologists and geneticists to dissect the molecular basis of key traits
201 tly, genome-wide sampling enables population geneticists to distinguish effects that act on the whole
202 he model and algorithm described will enable geneticists to identify and map imprinted quantitative t
203             More efficient imputation allows geneticists to locate and test effects of more DNA varia
204    Modern DNA sequencing technologies enable geneticists to rapidly identify genetic variation among
205                             Auto-SAM enables geneticists to run structured association mapping algori
206 tic methods in pedigree analysis has enabled geneticists to tackle computations intractable by standa
207 ects to these syndromes, it was possible for geneticists to take a candidate gene approach.
208 eview is to help bridge this gap by exposing geneticists to terminology, sampling methods and analysi
209 dy provides a useful resource for Drosophila geneticists to understand how transposons create extensi
210 nt a challenge-both to modelers and to human geneticists-to identify which important features are mis
211 aditionally sought to incriminate exposures; geneticists uncover inherited susceptibility; and molecu
212 , in the past, fallen by default to clinical geneticists untrained in rheumatology.
213 ng fluctuations during the whole crop cycle, geneticists usually do not consider environmental measur
214 molecular maps and markers can alter the way geneticists utilize wild and exotic germplasm.
215                          To identify Chinese geneticists' views of ethical issues in genetic testing
216 lity genes for common diseases has polarized geneticists' views on what disease models are appropriat
217 tured association mapping more accessible to geneticists, we have developed an automatic processing s
218                                              Geneticists were as likely as other life scientists to d
219 ling, and medical oncologists (v surgeons or geneticists) were more likely to discuss all six items (
220 eristics are highly informative for clinical geneticists when diagnosing genetic diseases.
221 light of one author's (J.L.) experience as a geneticist who recently had his own genome sequenced.
222                       Forty-seven percent of geneticists who asked other faculty for additional infor
223                                        Among geneticists who said they had intentionally withheld dat
224        This is a bonanza for the statistical geneticist, who can create probeset summaries with speci
225  oncologists, genetic counselors, and cancer geneticists will be required to drive the paradigm shift
226 challenge for the coming generation of human geneticists will be resolving complex polygenic and mult
227                                              Geneticists will become increasingly involved in profess
228 of genetic tools available to the Drosophila geneticist with live imaging and biophysical techniques.
229  can also cause mutant phenotypes, providing geneticists with an alternative yet powerful tool to ide
230 utants have only been available to mammalian geneticists within the past few years.
231                                   Population geneticists work with a nonrandom sample of the human ge
232                                   Similarly, geneticists working largely with modern crops and their

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