by Brooks | Mar 30, 2025 | Dictionary
a type of machine learning that uses artificial neural networks to learn from data. Artificial neural networks are inspired by the human brain, and they can be used to solve a wide variety of problems, including image recognition, natural language processing, and...
by Brooks | Mar 30, 2025 | Dictionary
Python is high-level, popular, general-purpose programming language that has a readable and easy to learn syntax. https://bioinformatics.ccr.cancer.gov/docs/intro-to-bioinformatics-ss2023/Lesson5/R_and_Python Check out UGenome’s ProPEx™ to see how you can...
by Brooks | Mar 30, 2025 | Dictionary
A DNA sequence variation that occurs when a single nucleotide (adenine, thymine, cytosine, or guanine) is different from the reference sequence (NIH). SNPs (pronounced “snips”) are single nucleotide polymorphisms Check out UGenome’s ProPEx™ to see...
by Brooks | Mar 30, 2025 | Dictionary
The study of substances called metabolites in cells and tissues. Metabolites are small molecules that are made when the body breaks down food, drugs, chemicals, or its own tissue. https://www.cancer.gov/publications/dictionaries/cancer-terms/def/metabolomics Check out...
by Brooks | Mar 30, 2025 | Dictionary
An alteration in the most common DNA nucleotide sequence. The term variant can be used to describe an alteration that may be benign, pathogenic, or of unknown significance (NIH). https://www.cancer.gov/publications/dictionaries/genetics-dictionary/def/variant Check...
by Brooks | Mar 30, 2025 | Dictionary
the National Library of Medicine’s® (NLM) free, searchable bibliographic database supporting scientific and medical research. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov...