book review - People.cs.uchicago.edu
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Different views of bioinformatics
CS view: what are the algorithms, data
structures and other concepts needed to
develop tools to solve biological problems
Biologist view: how to use tools to solve
typical problems of interest in biology
More theoretical view: what new
algorithms are suggested by biological
applications
Too much for one quarter
Genomics: DNA, RNA
Protein function
Algorithms for alignment
Gene microarrays
Proteomics/Mass spec
Protein structure prediction
Our runner-up course book
"Protein Bioinformatics : An Algorithmic
Approach to Sequence and Structure
Analysis"Ingvar Eidhammer; Hardcover;
$69.86
Takes the CS point of view
Limited to issues regarding proteins
Too many errors for my comfort zone
Background reference
"Protein Stucture and Function (Primers in
Biology)” Gregory A. Petsko and Dagmar
Ringe; Paperback; $47.66
Excellent material on basic biology (great
pictures!) but not bioinformatics.
Describes how proteins function
Good reference for biochemistry of
proteins and their function
Biologist-focused book
"Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics"
Jonathan Pevsner; Paperback; $72.16
“First class had 80 grad students and
several hundred auditors” at Johns
Hopkins
Presents “how to use” bioinfo tools from
the perspective of a biomedical researcher
Not so much on how the algorithms work
but a good way to see how they are used
Comprehensive reference
"Bioinformatics: A Practical Guide to the
Analysis of Genes and Proteins, Third
Edition"Andreas D. Baxevanis and B. F.
Francis Ouellette, eds; Hardcover; $60.00
This is an edited collection of essays by
experts on the use of different bioinfo tools
in different areas.
Intended as a reference (not a textbook)
Just the algorithms
"An Introduction to Bioinformatics
Algorithms (Computational Molecular
Biology)” Neil C. Jones; Hardcover;
$42.67
More of a focus on algorithms, with less
coverage of applications
The next step in the CS direction in
bioinformatics (e.g., PhD level course)