Bioinformatics, Vol 14, 764-771, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press
ET Kraemer and TE Ferrin
The volume of data produced by genome projects, X-ray crystallography, NMR
spectroscopy, and electron and confocal microscopy present the
bioinformatics community with new challenges for analyzing, understanding,
and exchanging this data. At the 1998 Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing, a
track entitled 'Molecules to Maps: Tools for Visualization and Interaction
in Computational Biology' provided tool developers and users with the
opportunity to discuss advances in tools and techniques to assist
scientists in evaluating, absorbing, navigating, and correlating this sea
of information, through visualization and user interaction. In this paper
we present these advances and discuss some of the challenges that remain to
be solved.
ARTICLES
Molecules to maps: tools for visualization and interaction in support of computational biology
Department of Computer Science, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA. eileen@cs.wustl.edu
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