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Jürg Bähler

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  237
Citations -  24955

Jürg Bähler is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizosaccharomyces pombe & Gene. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 227 publications receiving 21327 citations. Previous affiliations of Jürg Bähler include University of Debrecen & European Bioinformatics Institute.

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Proportionality : a valid alternative to correlation for relative data

TL;DR: In this paper, the strength of proportionality between two variables can be meaningfully and interpretably described by a new statistic ϕ which can be used instead of correlation as the basis of familiar analyses and visualisation methods, including co-expression networks and clustered heatmaps.
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Cell-cycle control of gene expression in budding and fission yeast.

TL;DR: The regulation of three major transcriptional waves, which roughly coincide with three main cell-cycle transitions (initiation of DNA replication, entry into mitosis, and exit from mitosis), are discussed.
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Whole-genome microarrays of fission yeast: characteristics, accuracy, reproducibility, and processing of array data.

TL;DR: The genome of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has recently been sequenced, setting the stage for the post-genomic era of this increasingly popular model organism and providing data for several microarray properties that are rarely measured.
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Genome‐wide characterization of fission yeast DNA replication origins

TL;DR: There is a continuum of origin efficiency and that there is differential origin activity in the mitotic and meiotic cell cycles, with average efficiency twice as high during mitosis compared with meiosis, which can account for their different S‐phase lengths.
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The Gene Ontology: Enhancements for 2011

Judith A. Blake, +146 more
TL;DR: The Gene Ontology (GO) is a community bioinformatics resource that represents gene product function through the use of structured, controlled vocabularies and continues to expand and improve as a result of targeted ontology development.