「Genetics」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 645件
In | genetics, a founder mutation is a mutation that appear |
In | genetics, a strain is said to be auxotrophic if it car |
In | genetics, a terminator, or transcription terminator is |
e similar to fruit punch, created by Zaiger's | Genetics, a company that develops novel fruit through |
In | genetics, a neutral mutation is a mutation that has no |
In | genetics, a maternal effect occurs when the phenotype |
In | genetics, a centimorgan (abbreviated cM) or map unit ( |
In population | genetics, a cline could include a spectrum of subspeci |
Genetics Abstracts | |
ws, Current Contents, EMBASE/Excerpta Medica, | Genetics Abstracts, MEDLINE, Neuroscience Citation Ind |
Radiation, pollution, and | genetics account for 10% of lung cancer cases...so may |
nder Arntzen's leadership, Centers for Animal | Genetics, Advanced Invertebrate Molecular Sciences and |
, a member and then acting chair of the Human | Genetics Advisory Commission (1996 to 1999) and a memb |
Edward Murray East, a pioneer in plant | genetics, also worked there when he studied Mendelian |
In | genetics, an operator is a segment of DNA to which a t |
In molecular | genetics, an untranslated region (or UTR) refers to ei |
In molecular | genetics, an open reading frame (ORF) is a DNA sequenc |
MEGA, Molecular Evolutionary | Genetics Analysis, is a software package used for esti |
y Foundation Distinguished Professor in Human | Genetics and Director of the Institute for Human Genet |
Through utilizing the methods of | genetics and molecular biology, molecular genetics dis |
ity in Baltimore and took graduate degrees in | genetics and anthropology from the University of Arizo |
He went on to work in individual differences, | genetics, and cognitive neuropsychology, publishing ov |
infectious diseases, chest medicine, medical | genetics and palliative care. |
tinguished Professor of Evolution, Population | Genetics and Genomics at Indiana University, Bloomingt |
sociate professor in the departments of Human | Genetics and Medicine at McGill University and associa |
nt takes 4-6 years to complete depending upon | genetics, and sometimes as long as 10 years. |
o, Mae-Wan, born in Hong Kong, is a reader in | genetics and biophysics in the United Kingdom |
mantic thriller which explores concerns about | genetics and biotechnology amidst the turmoil of what |
ork of the laboratory is supported by selling | genetics and genomics related commercial services such |
k part in a Carte Blanche story, dealing with | genetics and unlocking the mysteries of race and ethni |
It focuses on human | genetics, and is published monthly by the Nature Publi |
quent topic of discussion in human population | genetics and genetic genealogy. |
as still an emerging research frontier, human | genetics, and its vast potential to address problems s |
in molecular evolution, molecular population | genetics and bioinformatics. |
Fungal | Genetics and Biology is a peer-reviewed scientific jou |
tist and physician who investigates molecular | genetics and diseases in humans and specialises in can |
st published in 1978, and its utility in both | genetics and protein studies, as well as genetic engin |
ary research interest is to utilize molecular | genetics and bioninformatics technologies to develop n |
al to live 200 to 400 years if they have good | genetics, and if they have a good growing environment. |
France) was the founder of the Institute for | Genetics and Cellular and Molecular Biology in Strasbo |
He has also taught many | genetics and developmental biology classes to undergra |
engineered fish are used in basic research in | genetics and development. |
Sciences covers botanical research including | genetics and genomics, developmental and cell biology, |
hts appear to be the healthy result of normal | genetics and nutrition. |
Dr Rozen is a James McGill Professor of Human | Genetics and Pediatrics and Associate Vice-Principal ( |
Haites is currently a Professor in Medical | Genetics and the Head of College at the University of |
ditor for the journal Twin Research and Human | Genetics and was Contributing Research Editor for Twin |
Sykes explains the principles of | genetics and human evolution, the particularities of m |
Risch emphasizes the links between population | genetics and clinical application, believing that unde |
, a Fellow of the American College of Medical | Genetics and a member of the Institute of Medicine. |
h (B.S.) and Yale (Ph.D.) in biochemistry and | genetics, and began her research on plants and symbios |
seases affect humans and animals, pathosystem | genetics, and management of plant diseases. |
er, he signed up for Introduction to Biology, | Genetics, and Developmental Biology. |
or disability rights, a writer on disability, | genetics and bio-ethics and was the co-author of The S |
Their mode of action, | genetics and regulation have all been studied, for at |
a book entitled Tempo and Mode in Evolution: | Genetics and Paleontology 50 Years After Simpson edite |
ional Basic Economy Corporation, a commercial | genetics and agribusiness concern based in New York an |
hly influential in the founding of population | genetics and the modern synthesis. |
" Monaco, M.D., Ph.D. is a Professor of Human | Genetics and Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Planning & Resources |
Microbiology (1966) and a Ph.D. in Microbial | Genetics and Biochemistry (1969) from Colorado State U |
She also holds a DEA in | genetics and biotechnologies from INPL. |
ian and professor in the departments of Human | Genetics and Statistics at the University of Chicago. |
Professor, Head of the Section on Statistical | Genetics, and Director of the NIH funded Nutrition Obe |
ns, their role in molecular and cell biology, | genetics, and evolution, and their regulation and mech |
as Associate Editor for the journals Behavior | Genetics and Journal of Applied Psychology. |
ollination, population biology, fire ecology, | genetics, and other factors in its biology are unknown |
In | genetics and especially genetic engineering, deletion |
Drosophila guide: introduction to the | genetics and cytology of Drosophila melanogaster. |
, Neuroscience, Molecular & Cellular Biology, | Genetics, and Physics. |
e most conditions involve the intersection of | genetics and lifestyle issues. |
In his book | Genetics and the races of man: An introduction to mode |
nt Chair of the Department of Human Molecular | Genetics and Biochemistry in the university's Sackler |
er 2009) was Associate Professor of Molecular | Genetics and Cell Biology and of Microbiology at the U |
demy of Sciences commissioned a book entitled | Genetics and the Origin of Species: From Darwin to Mol |
Genetics and the Origin of Species (ISBN 0-231-05475-0 | |
ook which integrates molecular biology, human | genetics, and genomics with traditional evolutionary s |
d by a group of Poll Dorset breeders to share | genetics, and progeny test elite young sires to identi |
Thiessen published five books on behavior | genetics and over 250 articles in animal and human beh |
ad wide influence on research in agriculture, | genetics, and other areas of science. |
It offers degrees in | Genetics and Plant Biology and Microbial Biology. |
lusive Harris ancestor, this project combines | genetics and genealogy to break through such "brick wa |
In | genetics and biochemistry, a repressor gene inhibits t |
ed from baseball in 1974 he earned a Ph.D. in | genetics and an M.S. in systems engineering from the U |
Her mother, the late Madeline Goodman, was a | genetics and women's studies professor then assistant |
Recently, due to advances in the fields of | genetics and molecular biology, research and education |
as at this stage that he became interested in | genetics and had his first publications on immunogenet |
s General Hospital, where he taught molecular | genetics and neurology from 1987 to 1991. |
from 2000 to 2005, Chair of the UK Forum for | Genetics and Insurance from 1998 to 2002. |
ds in evolutionary biology such as population | genetics and phylogenetics. |
Genetics and the Jewish Identity, with Paul S. Appelba | |
blished a new program using large-scale mouse | genetics and genomics to identify regulators of blood |
wcastle and University of Durham, majoring in | genetics and life sciences that has been in the forefr |
ogenetics and more than 80 publications about | genetics and bioethics. |
ne from 1963 to 1969 and professor of medical | genetics and medicine at the Indiana University School |
partment of Medicine, the Department of Human | Genetics, and the Institute of Parasitology. |
red by the management of Institute for Forest | Genetics and Tree Breeding (IFGTB), which is also situ |
ong his works are a standard text on behavior | genetics and original work on behavior-genetic methodo |
tor A. Mckusick Euro-Mediterranean Center for | Genetics and Medicine. |
er 200 scientific papers on laboratory animal | genetics and related issues. |
nada as "a leader and world authority in both | genetics and pediatrics" and having "contributed to th |
blication to discuss the relationship between | genetics and natural selection in plants. |
' Jesup lectures, are Theodosius Dobzhansky's | Genetics and the Origin of Species, Ernst Mayr's Syste |
Genetics and Development | |
rs relating to general biology, biochemistry, | genetics and biotechnology. |
malformation of arms, to the Swiss Society of | Genetics, and gave a full report of his findings in 19 |
e population dynamics, behaviors, physiology, | genetics and conservation. |
rch Council's Committee on Common Problems of | Genetics and Paleontology (later re-named the Committe |
iversity of Washington, where she studies the | genetics and interaction of genetics and environmental |
Some of his works include " | Genetics: The Continunity of Life", "Relics of Eden: T |
oined the reorganized Department of Molecular | Genetics and Cell Biology, in which Fuchs was eventual |
Senior Research Officer in the Department of | Genetics and spent the rest of his career in Oxford as |
In 1991 he was awarded the Balzan Prize for | Genetics and Evolution "For his powerful analysis of e |
Endangered Species: | Genetics and Policy |
D.s in | genetics and psychology. |
ecame a centre of excellence for high quality | genetics and served as a model for many other farmers. |
o did some work in molecular biology, medical | genetics and bioinformatics, areas which he no longer |
eugenics movement adopted ideas of Mendelian | genetics and promoted negative eugenics to prevent tho |
Ph.D is Professor of Internal Medicine, Human | Genetics, and Public Health at the University of Michi |
Infectious Diseases, Department of Molecular | Genetics and Microbiology, Stony Brook University. |
Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits. | |
A number of his books include Population | Genetics and Animal Improvement (1950), Genetic Homeos |
Genetics and the Origin of Species. | |
cs, transplant and immune diseases, oncology, | genetics and diagnostics. |
The Council for Responsible | Genetics and other researchers have criticized this wo |
Human and Primate | Genetics and Evolution |
Balzan prize 2003 for | genetics and evolution (The third recipient, following |
He is Professor of Molecular Biology, | Genetics, and Medical Genetics at the University of Wi |
Sho was awarded a PhD in molecular | genetics and cell biology there in 2009, at the age of |
His research focuses on population | genetics and evolutionary biology including the Intern |
y; the topic connects strongly to speciation, | genetics and development. |
een important in elucidating human population | genetics and the evolution of primates, including the |
Main article: | Genetics and archaeogenetics of South Asia |
LIGHT - Leeds Institute of | Genetics and Health Therapeutics |
ore than forty years he has been studying the | genetics and molecular biology of the model actinomyce |
Interdisciplinary topics, such as nutrition, | genetics, and aging. |
For | Genetics and the Origin of Species Dobzhansky was awar |
e Institute is divided into the Department of | Genetics and the Department of Virology & Immunology. |
compiler of Cytology, | genetics and evolution (J Murray, London, 1972) |
Population | genetics and molecular evolution : papers marking the |
ty began to reveal other human traits, as did | genetics, and eventually three of the great apes were |
d on computational computing as it applies to | genetics and biology for over 10 years. |
Detailed studies of its anatomy, | genetics, and behavior will probably be necessary to d |
f Lionel Penrose, a world famous professor of | genetics, and brother of Roger Penrose and Oliver Penr |
he became an Assistant Professor in the Human | Genetics and Pediatrics Departments at McGill in 1984, |
he award of an MRC Centre in Neuropsychiatric | Genetics and Genomics- the first MRC Centre in Wales a |
d's work was celebrated in 1971 by Ecological | Genetics and Evolution, a series of essays edited by R |
ticist working in evolutionary biology, human | genetics, and population genetics, now Associate Profe |
cepted the position of assistant professor of | genetics and development at the University of Californ |
Since then, | genetics and molecular biology have become core parts |
rrently at the Japanese National Institute of | Genetics and, in 2002, she was elected to the United S |
tients" (Journal of Assisted Reproduction and | Genetics, April 2007) |
P6 has been identified as described in Nature | Genetics April; 41 [4]:386-8. |
Some high points of past work in chemical | genetics are listed below. |
The underlying | genetics are uncertain. |
Their | genetics are stabilized at 3/8 Brahman and 5/8 Angus. |
gle X and Y chromosome, unlike females, whose | genetics are characterized by two X chromosomes. |
This scientific approach is called reverse | genetics as the scientist wants to unravel the functio |
It has been proposed to classify autism using | genetics as well as behavior. |
The drug had been developed by Seattle | Genetics as a treatment for acute myeloid leukemia (AM |
homa (ALCL) and Hodgkin's lymphoma by Seattle | Genetics as of October 2010. |
tion than many others available in population | genetics as it requires fewer assumptions. |
in plant and animal breeding and quantitative | genetics as well as other fields. |
ments include being President of the Behavior | Genetics Association (1982-1983) and cofounder of the |
He also was an active member of the Behavior | Genetics Association and his work over the remainder o |
Elected President of the Behavior | Genetics Association (BGA) in 1993 |
Lifetime Achievement Award from the Behavior | Genetics Association, followed in 1997 by the Lifetime |
ean Sociobiological Society, and the Behavior | Genetics Association. |
He has been president of the Behavior | Genetics Association. |
In 1981, Hall was named Professor of Medical | Genetics at the University of British Columbia and the |
ediatric geneticist, is Emeritus Professor of | Genetics at the Departments of Pediatrics and Medical |
geneticist and professor in the department of | genetics at the Harvard Medical School, and an associa |
then worked at the Institute for Behavioural | Genetics at the University of Colorado at Boulder. |
n Harbin, Manchuria, he received his Ph.D. in | genetics at the University of California, Berkeley in |
tinues today at The Institute of Cytology and | Genetics at Novosibirsk, under the supervision of Lyud |
She was Professor of | Genetics at Queen Mary, University of London from 1989 |
McVean completed his PhD in the Department of | Genetics, at the University of Cambridge with Laurence |
ed post-doctoral research in Neuropsychiatric | Genetics at the Broad Institute in Cambridge, Massachu |
in the Graduate Program of the Department of | Genetics at George Washington University and formerly |
in the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and | Genetics at the University of Oxford. |
He was Arthur Balfour Professor of | Genetics at Cambridge University between 1959 and 1983 |
Medical Research Council Fellowship to study | genetics at the University of London and at Washington |
) Chief of the Laboratory of Biochemistry and | Genetics at the National Institute of Diabetes & Diges |
Professor and the Chair of the Department of | Genetics at Rutgers University. |
He is Professor of Molecular | Genetics at the University of Surrey, United Kingdom. |
He received a Ph.D. degree studying | genetics at Cornell University in 1971 and was a Corne |
a Lederberg founded the Department of Medical | Genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. |
t of Molecular Virology, Immunology & Medical | Genetics at the Tzagournis Medical Research Facility o |
ics and Gynecology, and Molecular and Medical | Genetics at the Oregon Health and Science University w |
umbia University and a professor of Molecular | Genetics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine fo |
as the founding Chairman of the Department of | Genetics at Harvard Medical School. |
edicine, and chief of the Division of Medical | Genetics, at the University of California-San Diego. |
zhny Novgorod and organized the Department of | Genetics at Gorky University. |
ven and then did five years research on human | genetics at Stanford University in the United States o |
ab which researches drosophila and population | genetics at Cornell University and is a member of a wo |
ion of Stephen Jay Gould in the Department of | Genetics at Harvard University in 1983, Lloyd studied |
in Sydney, Australia and studied biology and | genetics at Sydney University. |
He is currently Professor of | Genetics at Harvard Medical School, Professor of Healt |
currently associate Professor of Medicine and | Genetics at the University of Pennsylvania School of M |
oted to extraordinary professor for molecular | genetics at the University of Geneva. |
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