Computational Biology


Introduction to Bioinformatics
Synthetic Biology - A Primer (Revised Edition)
Metagenomic Futures: How Microbiome Research is Reconfiguring Health and What it Means to be Human (Routledge Studies in Anthropology)
Systems-Level Modelling of Microbial Communities: Theory and Practice (Focus Computational Biology Series)
Artificial Life: A Report from the Frontier Where Computers Meet Biology
Hidden Markov Models and Dynamical Systems
Molecular Modeling and Simulation: An Interdisciplinary Guide: An Interdisciplinary Guide (Interdisciplinary Applied Mathematics, 21)
Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters
A Life Decoded: My Genome: My Life
Bioinformatics: Genes, Proteins and Computers (Advanced Texts)
INFORMATION THEORY AND EVOLUTION
Computational Systems Biology
Blast
Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics
Bioinformatics: A Practical Guide To The Analysis Of Genes And Proteins
Differential Clinical Significance of Medical Information by I.C. PapachristosPhylogenetic Trees Made Easy by Barry G. HallPractical Computing for Biologists by Steven HaddockBioinformatics and Functional Genomics by Jonathan PevsnerBeginning Perl for Bioinformatics by James Tisdall
Bioinformatics Essential Books
11 books — 8 voters

Abhijit Naskar
Silicon and Sapiens (The Sonnet) Once upon a time, I put down my soldering iron and picked up the keyboard, for I couldn't afford to sustain my passion for electronics any more. But now that I look back, It was for the best. The world has plenty tech genius, what it lacks is reformer scientist. My inside awareness of machine intricacies has been an aid to my neuroscience. In a world torn between mind and machine, I bridge the shores of silicon and sapiens. Biologists often diss the potential ...more
Abhijit Naskar, World War Human: 100 New Earthling Sonnets

Alex M. Vikoulov
With advanced quantum computational systems in place, we could have computed the COVID-19 vaccine within hours, if not minutes, of its discovery. Perhaps, any kind of life-threatening virus, since it is nothing more than a piece of code, will be completely preventable with the advances in quantum computing and computational biology. The question is, then, if we could eventually shield ourselves against the common viral micro-threat, what would a macro-threat of unknown nature mean for the human- ...more
Alex M. Vikoulov, NOOGENESIS: Computational Biology

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