This bioinformatic phase is increasingly suggesting that biotech and genetics research is non-existent without some level of computer technology. |
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She is currently taking a year off from Sofia University, where she studied biology and genetics. |
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Five years later, in 1937, he came to Cornell University's Department of Plant Breeding, so that he could continue genetics and biometry. |
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Most bioscience and genetics based businesses' main concern is the establishment and protection of intellectual property rights. |
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We calculate several statistics that characterize the genetics of adaptation. |
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There is a lot of confusion regarding the genetics of the four traditional Birman point colors. |
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During the past two decades, we have witnessed exponential growth in the fields of genetics and molecular biology. |
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With the emergence of molecular biology and genetics, these two points of view have become ever more synthesized. |
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His research focuses on plant molecular biology, genetics, and bioinformatics. |
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He worked on convex functions, the Laplace transform, number theory and the mathematical theory of genetics. |
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Undoubtedly, new genetics are set to enrich our knowledge of human behavior in sickness and in health. |
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Understanding the genetics of this radiation resistance became the subject of her Ph.D. dissertation. |
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We know that genetics and heredity plays a part for a significant number of children. |
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But there probably are many different variations of asthma that have to do with genetics. |
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He believes that some of the more dangerous ideas come from who we are, our genetics, psychology and our own free will. |
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He is currently working with colleagues on the neuropsychology and the genetics of mathematical abilities. |
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In the future, the lab's work with hormones and genetics may help ranchers and breeders help their heifers even more. |
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The three main emphasis areas are ornamental horticulture, environmental and soil science, and genetics and crop breeding. |
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Wild populations provide novel opportunities for the understanding of the genetics of quantitative traits. |
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For genetics and breeding, it is fundamentally important to know the germline mutation rate induced by a mutagen. |
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A classic forward genetics approach relies on the identification of observable mutant phenotypes. |
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Governments and the military have no exclusive access to genetics, robotics or nanotechnology. |
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To understand further the genetics underlying pulmonary function, we analyzed data from 264 individuals from 26 pedigrees. |
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Illnesses and atrocities occur with a frequency related to the country you were born in and your own genetics. |
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A predisposition to obesity can come from genetics or an imbalance of body chemistry. |
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Scientists have long suspected genetics play a role in the onset of the disease. |
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However, the genetics of a naturally early leaf defoliation trait in wild cotton was not studied. |
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The study of genetics confirms that we are all extremely closely related biologically. |
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In doing so it has removed many of the limitations in the study of human genetics. |
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Not every problem in formal genetics can be resolved just with clear thinking and tests. |
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Karen hopes to study genetics and work with the cows she so loves when she completes her studies. |
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I recommend this book to students who wish to pursue a career in human molecular genetics. |
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Genomics is an accelerating and complex step in the longer history of molecular biology and genetics. |
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Mueller applied for the program because she too may pursue genetics in later studies. |
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In the first half of the twentieth century, Darwinian evolution and Mendelian genetics were not popular subjects in France. |
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The intervening years had seen advances in the study of pure biology at the microscopic level in parallel with advances in genetics. |
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Research in the area of behavioural genetics has raised many dilemmas in recent years. |
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The other approach is to study molecular evolutionary genetics to assess the evolutionary history of the gene. |
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Thus, it is perplexing that this type of work has been ignored in quantitative genetics. |
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Characterizing the molecular basis of adaptation is one of the most important goals in modern evolutionary genetics. |
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So I suppose it was the natural progression of my studies in genetics to concentrate on horses. |
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I take this to be an invitation to actively study genetics, atmospheric sciences and geology and so on. |
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The genetic analysis of quantitative traits using DNA markers is a landmark feature in the field of plant genetics. |
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Multivariate models are of great importance in applied, evolutionary, and theoretical quantitative genetics. |
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Classical quantitative genetics has applied linear modeling to the problem of mapping genotypic to phenotypic variation. |
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Numerous studies have been conducted on the genetics of various populations in India. |
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It was inevitable that Darwinism and its later development into the science of genetics should face fierce opposition from theologians. |
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Vavilov was an early student of Bateson and was thoroughly grounded in genetics and cytology. |
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For many years I have been interested in the ecological genetics of cyanogenesis in plants. |
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An autodidact and a polymath, Wallace studied economics, meteorology, history, genetics, and many other subjects. |
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Whether it had been genetics from his parents or a random act of nature was never revealed to him. |
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The botanist who spots a double flower in a field of single sees a chance mutation that has altered that plant's genetics. |
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In addition to their different fates, these two men were at opposite poles in their views of genetics. |
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As a practicing equine veterinarian, she hopes to specialize in equine sports medicine, podiatry, genetics or neurology. |
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Using his popularity and powers of persuasion, he inveigled a number of his teammates to enroll with him in the genetics course. |
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Nowhere is the debate more lively and contentious than in psychiatric genetics, but in truth there is a dearth of substantiated, empirical data. |
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Progress is especially rapid where information technology and molecular genetics are important. |
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Their manifesto is totally racist and abhorrent to anybody with a basic understanding of genetics, yet they are gaining strength. |
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This low yield grade for cattle with high quality grades is most likely a result of early weaning and Wagyu genetics. |
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The natural extension of his work on the genetics of pigmentation led him into a study of piebald mice, this turned out to be a quagmire. |
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As I look at this photo of her as a young woman, I can't help but ponder the strange quirks of genetics. |
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The Mendelian genetics of mimetic color patterns in Heliconius have been well studied using crosses between races and species. |
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But planes would still fly, and life still evolves through natural selection, common descent, and the known workings of genetics. |
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He promised to repudiate henceforth Weismannist formal genetics and blamed his teachers for his past errors. |
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His team are using fruit flies to study the genetics of cocaine and other addictive drugs. |
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Together, we have expertise in several areas, including cloning, genetics, biology, entomology, and virology. |
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The etiology of asthma is unknown, but it has been linked to occupational exposures, genetics, and environmental factors. |
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One of the papers in Science reveals the genetics of a dominant gut bug that serves humans well by breaking down otherwise indigestible food. |
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His book on ecological genetics went through several editions and his monographs on moths and butterflies are still used. |
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This section of the report distinguishes different research methods into behavioural genetics. |
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There, Borlaug oversaw foundation research in genetics, breeding, plant pathology, entomology, agronomy, soil science, and cereal technology. |
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Deep knowledge of anatomy physiology, etiology, embryology, digestion, metabolism, genetics and immunity is also found in many texts. |
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Interestingly enough, when we do the genetics, we find the familial history makes a difference. |
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Apoptosis research continues and includes developmental biology, cancer research, genetics, immunology, and toxicology. |
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Indeed the grandfather of genetics is Mendel, a monk who lived in Brno, now in the Czech Republic. |
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Aside from genetics, there can be other worrisome effects of an obsession with trophies. |
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We examined the genetics of hybrid incompatibility between two closely related diploid hermaphroditic plant species. |
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The first major breakthrough in understanding the molecular genetics of ABA biosynthesis involved the cloning of zeaxanthin epoxidase. |
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Galen, Vesalius, other anatomists, and the Church did not have the powerful perspective of historical data on anatomy, embryology, or genetics. |
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Structural equation models were first introduced into genetics, econometrics, and social science. |
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When the war ended, he was over 50, and instead of returning to mouse genetics he retreated into more general physiology and zoology. |
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Darwin's foremost omission was his failure to progress in elucidating the principles of genetics. |
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However, geneticists began criticizing him for his antiscientific declarations regarding the perniciousness of genetics. |
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The antidote to genetics as a driver of medicalisation lies in remaining sceptical and level headed. |
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The molecular genetics revolution of the 1960s swept up many of the brightest young minds. |
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She stresses that all mini-melon lines are the result of natural breeding and that genetics is probably the biggest factor in her results. |
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So, this scientist then spent a good few months examining the genetics of these lambs. |
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Numerous factors, including regulation of lipogenesis, genetics, age, nutrition, management, and environment, affect rate of marbling deposition. |
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His paper is one of the most profound papers in both demography and population genetics. |
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As a primary example, collection of family history and construction of pedigrees is a common activity in genetics curricula. |
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His close-cropped hair is gray by genetics, not chartreuse, cerise, or hot pink by designer dye. |
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The last part of the book recognizes the increasing importance of molecular pathology and genetics. |
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The genetic model delineated in the previous section can serve as the basis to explore the population genetics of dominance evolution. |
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First, models in molecular genetics are still inadequate for defining clear-cut molecular disease entities. |
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These surveys have addressed problems in population genetics, systematics, ecology, and conservation biology. |
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They also said the wolves' genetics, which dictate their long-term survivability, were not well understood. |
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An autodidact and a polymath, he studied economics, meteorology, history, genetics, and many other subjects. |
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Then there are areas with great potential for the future such as genetics but that potential is years away. |
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The high solvency of chlorocarbons damages the human nervous system and many other body systems including genetics and the immune function. |
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The specs call for moderate muscling and moderate back fat, not the ultra-lean genetics some breeders are promoting. |
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Improved management of the genetics of small captive populations is beginning to make propagation more successful. |
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The search would be most effective if it involved the fields of archaeology, historical linguistics and genetics. |
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As in most of genetics, breeding good hips is largely a matter of chance, or probability. |
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Generation of entire chromosomal maps has been a central problem in genetics right from its early years. |
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The social and ethical scruples thrown up by the science of new genetics are by now familiar. |
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By the age of nineteen, in 1909, Muller had already become committed to genetics and to the chromosome theory of heredity. |
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Also it has been found that if a farmed fish mates with a wild fish the genetics of their spawn is modified. |
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Behavioural genetics is such smashing science, it does not need to use anything that could look like a Barnum effect. |
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His work contributed to the synthesis of Mendelian genetics and Darwinian evolution, and to the development of the biological species concept. |
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In addition, research is being conducted on ground water quality, cave salamander distribution, and bat genetics. |
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He studied the genetics of this condition and found it was due to a single dominant gene. |
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My personal hope is that students will have some intuitive understanding of meiosis as the physical basis of genetics. |
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I regularly hold joint clinics with colleagues from overlapping specialties, such as genetics, neurology, ophthalmology, etc. |
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Since the 1860s Mendelian genetics has recognized that many phenotypic traits are related to functional units of heredity. |
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Darwinian biology explained how humans evolved from other life forms, and Mendelian genetics showed how defective traits were inherited. |
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The country has produced important work in biology, medicine, geology, mathematics, physics, genetics, psychology, and anthropology. |
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The first papers on plant molecular population genetics were published approximately 10 years ago. |
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Structural alterations of DNA, such as deletions, produce valuable null mutations for plant genetics. |
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I am excited because my fourth formers are doing genetics and human reproduction! |
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They say the teachers were simply trying to teach genetics and family traits. |
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That's why I say it's an absurd question, because it betrays, at the very least, a serious oversimplification of evolutionary genetics. |
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Pfennig, the University of North Carolina biologist, added that this aversion to mimics has been seen in other species as the result of genetics. |
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These two characteristics appear to be stable under many growth conditions and their inheritance obeys the rules of normal Mendelian genetics. |
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The contribution of genetics in handedness has been supported by studies of families of concordant twins and adopted individuals. |
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There has been tremendous concern about consumer interests and how they are affected by the genetics revolution. |
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More than any other area of genetics, then, the beneficial possibilities of gene therapy have been much vaunted. |
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The biobank would also act as a national focus for training in the fields of molecular genetics, biostatistics and epidemiology. |
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The main subdisciplines represented in conservation biology are population genetics, population biology, landscape ecology and biogeography. |
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The five-year initiative will support the research of outstanding scientists in fields such as genetics, epidemiology, bioinformatics, virology, and neuroscience. |
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He draws evidence from genetics, geography, paleontology, anatomy, and elsewhere. |
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Coincidentally with Muller's discovery in 1927 of the mutagenic effect of X rays, Vladimirovich started his long-term investigations of radiation genetics and radiobiology. |
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I had not worked on genetics since, as a Cambridge undergraduate, I had published juvenilia on polymorphisms maintained by single locus selection. |
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Many genetics texts include examples of agouti and black in mice. |
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Besides genetics, factors that keep most eastern old growth from soaring to the skies are thin, rocky soils and frequent hurricanes, windstorms, and ice storms. |
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Because of her interest in nature, including her love of plant life, she majored in plant genetics and minored in fine art at the University of California in Berkeley. |
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The programme therefore encompasses geo-science, oceanography, marine ecology, coelacanth biology, zoogeography, population genetics, and genome resource studies. |
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But it's astounding that a man who specializes in supposedly scientific apologetics, makes fundamental errors with even high-school level genetics. |
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During her long life she gardened in Buckinghamshire and studied genetics at Cambridge before trying her hand at hybridising various flowers, including aquilegias. |
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To a scientifically trained person, genetics of course cannot tell if some people living thousands of years ago were Aryan speakers or Dravidic speakers. |
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Throughout this work, Hall has set the standard for care, rigor, completeness, and scholarliness that is unsurpassed in modern behavioral genetics. |
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And still she succeeded in advancing the cause of the science of genetics. |
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The story of the emergence of theoretical population genetics, out of a tension between biometricians and Mendelians, has been told eloquently by Provine. |
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As a hardgainer, you weren't blessed with the genetics of Lee Priest, Tom Prince or any other mesomorph with seemingly self-inflating Popeye appendages. |
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In biology your focal point would probably be some problem in a subdiscipline such as anatomy, behavioral science, ecology, embryology, genetics, or physiology. |
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This collaboration involves researchers with complementary expertise, ranging from molecular genetics and biostatistics to sociology and cardiology. |
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Classical genetics of human disease deals with monogenic disorders in which a single mutation in a single gene is causatively related to the phenotype. |
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Information technology continues to improve exponentially, and this progress bleeds over into adjacent fields such as genetics, robotics and nanotechnology. |
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For Finno-Ugric genetics, which do not necessarily align with Finno-Ugric linguistics, see this related page written by another scholar for Virtual Finland. |
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From the beginning the emphasis in these journals has been mainly on organismic genetics in a wide variety of animals and plants, and in the early years, on eugenics. |
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Recent advances in human genetics have increased our understanding of the ways particular gene perturbations produce cranial skeletal malformations. |
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Because given her genetics and ability to kick cancer in the shins, she is now surely going to outlive me. |
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Here, one could introduce latent variables, such as the typical liability variate of quantitative genetics, and then model feedback or recursiveness at that level. |
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The system has found wide application in the studies on morphogenesis, virology, pathology, biochemistry, genetics and other fields of biology and medicine. |
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Crucially, however, even within the confines of the biological sciences, the science of genetics does not, and cannot, speak with a single, oracular voice. |
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So, thousands of years before Gregor Mendel postulated his theories on genetics and heredity, indigenous Americans were breeding corn to select for desirable traits. |
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On the one hand, his excursions into the mechanics of heredity and population genetics provide a valuable background for his rejection of racial and eugenic theories. |
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More complex models with linked genetics and epistasis and more complex demography will likely show even more complex patchworks of maladaptation across landscapes. |
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Because of the difficulties associated with performing genetics on partially penetrant mutations, this mutant will not be discussed further in this paper. |
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Advances in human genetics and immunobiology now provide an opportunity to capitalize on recent discoveries in basic immunology and cytokine biology. |
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What changes will the new genetics and information technology bring? |
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On his walls are plans for an array of laboratories that will eventually interface with the Sanger Institute for genetics and the cancer unit in Addenbrooke's hospital. |
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The technique is intended to integrate Mendelian transmission genetics, allelic frequency, and penetrance with the patterns of covariance expected in polygenic inheritance. |
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By integrating critical thinking within the discipline of genetics, students may become more informed decision makers within the context of biotechnology. |
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The fruit fly is among the most studied organisms in the world, because its genes can be easily examined and manipulated to simulate human genetics. |
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It was my interest in and enthusiasm about cells and their culture, first awakened there, that 14 years later was to direct me into human cytogenetics, thence human genetics. |
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Naturopathic philosophy also suggests that genetics determine underlying susceptibility to disease or dysfunction, but not actual disease manifestation. |
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But when you look at those organisms with genetics, what you can see is that there are in fact sharp demarcations between populations from one place to the next. |
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In return, he presented the University with a handsome endowment for genetics student prizes and scholarships, funded by the sale of the cream of his reprint collection. |
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Together the team members contribute a wealth of resources, including expertise in cloning, genetics, entomology, and plant biology and pathology. |
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However, these studies may have overestimated the effect of genetics if monozygotic twins share exposure to more environmental effects than dizygotic twins do. |
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As sources of evidence, the topics of evolutionary genetics, extremophilic organisms, and geological history are covered. |
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The variability in warfarin dosing depends on several factors, including demographics, the environment, and genetics. |
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Searching the lower levels of the genetics labs, John finds himself trapped and then hears growling which he assumes is the hound. |
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Simply, most weed scientists don't know about molecular genetics and most genomicists have yet to discover the world of fast-evolving weeds. |
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In the United States, many ranchers are now using DNA testing to cull the residual cattle genetics from their bison herds. |
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Maize is still an important model organism for genetics and developmental biology today. |
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In particular, the Roslin Institute of Edinburgh, Scotland used sheep for genetics research that produced groundbreaking results. |
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The emergence of population genetics further undermined the categorisation of Europeans into clearly defined origin groups. |
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In 1958 it closed down and all remaining research was moved to the institute of genetics at Uppsala University. |
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In biology, evolution, chromosomes, DNA, genetics and the methods of molecular biology are creatures of the West. |
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This is how the F plasmid, which forms the basis of a lot of classical E. coli genetics, is transferred from one cell to another. |
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These are accompanied by one of the largest genetic records which have been collected by deCODE genetics. |
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However, attempts to determine historical population genetics are complicated by subsequent migrations and demographic fluctuations. |
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Another detailed nuclear genetic study has also implied that Swedes largely share genetics with Finns. |
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It is based on a scientific approach, and brings together fields such as archaeology, behavioral ecology, psychology, primatology, and genetics. |
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I read everything I could on genetics and also on cystic fibrosis. |
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Much of the changes reflect the advances of cladistic analysis and molecular genetics. |
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Subsequently, genetics has been used to investigate and resolve these issues. |
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They are used in research into genetics, developmental biology, cell biology, oncology and immunology. |
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Biologists and taxonomists have made many attempts to define species, beginning from morphology and moving towards genetics. |
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Molecular genetics allowed much greater insight into this previously intractable problem. |
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According to a genetics study, the United States population has formed as a result of recolonization by Canadian seals. |
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This model is supported by multiple and independent lines of evidence, such as the fossil record and genetics. |
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The wildcat subspecies that gave rise to the housecat is most likely the African wildcat, based on genetics, morphology, and behaviour. |
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This report is segmented by animal products, animal types, animal diagnostic market and animal genetics market. |
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Through these reports, advances in molecular genetics are used to create or confirm stories individuals have about social identities. |
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In general, the material on race has moved from surface traits to genetics and evolutionary history. |
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Though most biology students know Gregor Mendel as the father of genetics, they know little about the man himself. |
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The Frasier star is joining the cast of X Men 3 as Beast, a giant, blue-furred mutant monster who is also a pacifist genetics researcher. |
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Goldstein is chariman of molecular genetics at UT-Southwestern and cowinner with Brown of the 1985 Nobel Prize. |
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Meanwhile, subatomic energy, genetics, the sight of Earthrise from space and Rachel Carson's Silent Spring expanded our perception of the world. |
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The Bantu expansion reshaped Africa's population genetics and may have helped spread Eurasian gene variants, the researchers suspect. |
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Natural selection relies crucially on the idea of heredity, but developed before the basic concepts of genetics. |
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We all learned about homeobox genes in our developmentary biology and molecular genetics classes. |
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For the novice, Carey uses the analogy of a script and film to explain the difference and interactions between genetics and epigenetics. |
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Nucleosides are the building blocks of nucleic acids, but also perform other functions within organisms not related to genetics at all. |
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The addition of molecular genetics has led to evolutionary developmental biology, which explains evolution at the molecular level. |
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They see a grand synthesis between developmental genetics and cladistics, and work to interest students in creating it. |
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The team's research shows genetics play a key role in lower back pain and the deterioration of intervertebral discs of the spine as well. |
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Using fossil evidence in addition to information from genetics and neuroscience, the authors create a precise profile of Neandertal cognition. |
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Apart from genetics the mesology bears a great influence on the physical body. |
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Readers shouldn't be intimidated by the lofty concepts or multisyllabic genetics jargon, though. |
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Contradictory data from archaeology and genetics will most likely deliver future hypotheses that will, eventually, confirm each other. |
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With apologies to the sociobiologists, and pleading data limitations, we leave aside the issue of genetics in this paper. |
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They exclude discussion of prenatal development, and meiosis, mitosis, and fetal development, although genetics and teratogens are covered. |
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Geri Halliwell and Sophie Dahl are examples of stars who've cheated genetics to change from soft, round endomorphs to lean, athletic mesomorphs. |
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For example, Mendelian genetics arose and was appropriated by eugenicists to falsely link complex personal attributes to heredity. |
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Recent research has shown perfectionism to be an issue of genetics. |
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Nature and nurture, genetics and family background all come into play. |
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Our immunity, neurochemistry, and metabolism have self-righting mechanisms that am encoded within our genetics. |
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If you've never been a smoker and you develop lung cancer, how did you get it? Is it genetics, environment, radon, luck of the draw? |
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The other is that developmental genetics offers keys to understanding macroevolution. |
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Detection and molecular genetics of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases among cefuroxime-resistant Escherichia coli and Klebsiella spp. |
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Lysenko's revival of Lamarckianism gained Stalin's favor because it opposed Mendelian genetics. |
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Conservation genetics of an endemic and endangered epiphytic Laelia speciosa. |
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The genetics of hyphal fusion and vegetative incompatibility in filamentous ascomycete fungi. |
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Before the discovery of Mendelian genetics, one common hypothesis was blending inheritance. |
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Allopolyploid origin and population genetics of the rare orchid Spiranthes diluvialis. |
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Proof that the genetic code is a degenerate triplet code finally came from genetics experiments, some of which were performed by Crick. |
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In our series a high frequency of younger population developed MDS, a detailed molecular genetics and aetiological factors need to be studied. |
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Molecular genetics of pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasias. |
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All dates are approximate and conjectural, obtained through research in the fields of anthropology, archaeology, genetics, geology, or linguistics. |
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Various suggestions have been put forward to explain Henry's family's bitter disputes, from their inherited family genetics to the failure of Henry and Eleanor's parenting. |
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The 20th century has seen a modernization of mycology that has come from advances in biochemistry, genetics, molecular biology, and biotechnology. |
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Individual reactions to air pollutants depend on the type of pollutant a person is exposed to, the degree of exposure, and the individual's health status and genetics. |
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During my training in medical genetics, I worked with Dr Victor McKusick, just as he was becoming involved with Little People of America, to study chondrodysplasia. |
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In the late 20th century, some scholars theorized a long period of interaction, which resulted in many complex changes in genetics, languages, and culture among the peoples. |
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Genetic data describing the maize mutant stocks as well as myriad other data about maize genetics can be accessed at MaizeGDB, the Maize Genetics and Genomics Database. |
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Full of genetics, clever allusions, and above all an interesting examination of human nature, Googolplex tugs at the imagination long past its final sentence. |
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Several tobacco plants have been used as model organisms in genetics. |
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As a physician, Varki had little interest in great ape genetics until his research on sugar molecules called sialic acids led him in that direction. |
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Furthermore, forward genetics screens identified a ubiquitin specific protease to be involved in regulating direct reprogramming of hypodermal cells in worms. |
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Between 1896 and 1902, Downing College sold part of its land to build the Downing Site, comprising new scientific laboratories for anatomy, genetics and Earth sciences. |
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Innovatively for a project such as this, regular chapters on linguistics and genetics complement the otherwise predominantly archaeological and palaeoanthropological emphasis. |
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A phylogenetic and population genetics analysis is helpful in understanding historical and current patterns of connectivity and genetic diversity. |
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Another subject in the literature which has been widely discussed is whether genetics can show signs of Germanic invasions, particularly in England. |
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In comparison with the effects of genetics, nutrition, and general health, social influences are small, shifting timing by a few months rather than years. |
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Among the terms he defines are crop rotation, habitat, low-temperature acclimatisation, quantitative genetics, translocation tester set, and viroid. |
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They suggest that genetics could help to explain why parental turnout is such a strong predictor of voting in young people, and also why voting appears to be habitual. |
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Combining Roche's expertise in genetics, genomics and proteomics with CombiMatrix's Biochip Platform will not only speed up but also shape the future of genomic research. |
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Another study on population genetics of the mutation showed that during the Neolithic period, FVL in Europe had probably expanded from Turkey, Anatolia. |
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The biopharmaceutical company deCODE genetics has funded the creation of a genealogy database that is intended to cover all of Iceland's known inhabitants. |
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More subversively, he attempts to direct attention away from approaches to happiness that depend on genetics, set-points, adaptation, and social comparison. |
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At the turn of the 21st century, the principles of human genetics and genetic genealogy were applied to the study of populations of Gaelic origin. |
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A large-scale study of ancient genetics, published in the June 11 Nature, provides evidence for migrations and lactose intolerance in Bronze Age Eurasia. |
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The amount of milk produced per day during this period varies considerably by breed and by individual cow depending on her body condition, genetics, health, and nutrition. |
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Findings from molecular genetics, for example, have prompted adopting new groups, such as the Afrotheria, and abandoning traditional groups, such as the Insectivora. |
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In this paper, a quintet of Russian scientists investigates the developmental genetics of plant-microbial symbiosis from developmental and applied viewpoints. |
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The second explanation is that humans and non human primates have different bone structure because of genetics with humans evolving to a lighter, more gracile structure. |
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This method does not appear to be reliable for the migration out of Africa, in contrast to human genetics, JCV strains associated with African populations are not basal. |
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As a leading scientist in plant molecular genetics, Li has been selected as academian of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and fellow of the Third World Academy of Sciences. |
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As a leading scientist in plant molecular genetics, he has been selected as academian of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and fellow of the Third World Academy of Sciences. |
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Human evolutionary genetics studies how one human genome differs from the other, the evolutionary past that gave rise to it, and its current effects. |
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Race is the classification of humans into groups based on physical traits, ancestry, genetics, or social relations, or the relations between them. |
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Technological developments included the development of airplanes and space exploration, nuclear technology, advancement in genetics, and the dawning of the Information Age. |
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