Knowledge Discovery in Proteomics
Seiten
2005
Chapman & Hall/CRC (Verlag)
978-1-58488-439-2 (ISBN)
Chapman & Hall/CRC (Verlag)
978-1-58488-439-2 (ISBN)
Presents discussions on some of the key issues in high-throughput proteomics. This work focuses on specific domains such as: mass spectrometry-based protein analysis; protein-protein interaction network analysis; systematic high-throughput protein crystallization; systematic, integrated analysis of multiple data repositories; and, systems biology.
Multi-modal representations, the lack of complete and consistent domain theories, rapid evolution of domain knowledge, high dimensionality, and large amounts of missing information - these are challenges inherent in modern proteomics. As our understanding of protein structure and function becomes ever more complicated, we have reached a point where the actual management of data is a major stumbling block to the interpretation of results from proteomic platforms, to knowledge discovery.
Knowledge Discovery in Proteomics presents timely, authoritative discussions on some of the key issues in high-throughput proteomics, exploring examples that represent some of the major challenges of knowledge discovery in the field. The authors focus on five specific domains:
Mass spectrometry-based protein analysis
Protein-protein interaction network analysis
Systematic high-throughput protein crystallization
Systematic, integrated analysis of multiple data repositories
Systems biology
In each area, the authors describe the challenges created by the type of data produced and present potential solutions to the problem of data mining within the domain. They take a systems approach, covering individual data and integrating its computational aspects, from data preprocessing, storage, and access to analysis, visualization, and interpretation.
With clear exposition, practical examples, and rich illustrations, this book presents an outstanding overview of this emerging field, and builds the background needed for the fruitful exchange of ideas between computational and biological scientists.
Multi-modal representations, the lack of complete and consistent domain theories, rapid evolution of domain knowledge, high dimensionality, and large amounts of missing information - these are challenges inherent in modern proteomics. As our understanding of protein structure and function becomes ever more complicated, we have reached a point where the actual management of data is a major stumbling block to the interpretation of results from proteomic platforms, to knowledge discovery.
Knowledge Discovery in Proteomics presents timely, authoritative discussions on some of the key issues in high-throughput proteomics, exploring examples that represent some of the major challenges of knowledge discovery in the field. The authors focus on five specific domains:
Mass spectrometry-based protein analysis
Protein-protein interaction network analysis
Systematic high-throughput protein crystallization
Systematic, integrated analysis of multiple data repositories
Systems biology
In each area, the authors describe the challenges created by the type of data produced and present potential solutions to the problem of data mining within the domain. They take a systems approach, covering individual data and integrating its computational aspects, from data preprocessing, storage, and access to analysis, visualization, and interpretation.
With clear exposition, practical examples, and rich illustrations, this book presents an outstanding overview of this emerging field, and builds the background needed for the fruitful exchange of ideas between computational and biological scientists.
Jurisica, Igor; Wigle, Dennis
Introduction. Knowledge Management. Current Status and Future Perspectives of Mass Spectrometry. Graph Theory Analysis of Protein--Protein Interactions. HTP Protein Crystallization Approaches. Integration of Diverse Data, Algorithms, and Domains. From High-Throughput to Systems Biology. References.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 2.9.2005 |
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Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 635 g |
Themenwelt | Mathematik / Informatik ► Mathematik |
Naturwissenschaften ► Biologie ► Biochemie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-58488-439-8 / 1584884398 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-58488-439-2 / 9781584884392 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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