scispace - formally typeset
R

Rasmus Nielsen

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  594
Citations -  96106

Rasmus Nielsen is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Selection (genetic algorithm). The author has an hindex of 135, co-authored 556 publications receiving 84898 citations. Previous affiliations of Rasmus Nielsen include National Research University – Higher School of Economics & Griffith University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

CpG + CpNpG Analysis of Protein-Coding Sequences from Tomato

TL;DR: The results suggest different roles of CpG and CpNpG methylation, with Cp npG possibly playing a specialized role in defense against transposons and RNA viruses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of GOUNDRY, a cryptic subgroup of Anopheles gambiae s.l., and its impact on susceptibility to Plasmodium infection

TL;DR: The results illuminate the genomic evolution of one of probably several cryptic, ecologically specialized subgroups of Anopheles and provide a potent example of how vector population dynamics may complicate efforts to control or eradicate malaria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in ds/dn in the HIV-1 env gene.

TL;DR: There is a significant increase in the ds/dn ratio between the third year of infection and the subsequent years in the data analyzed by Bonhoeffer, Holmes, and Nowak (1995) (Rodrigo and Mullins 1996; Nielsen 1997; Nielsen and Yang 1998).
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term effect of smartphone-delivered Interval Walking Training on physical activity in patients with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a parallel group single-blinded randomised controlled trial

TL;DR: This trial investigates whether Interval Walking Training using the InterWalk application is superior to Danish municipality-based rehabilitation in increasing moderate-and-vigorous physical activity levels in patients with T2D across 52 weeks and hypothesise that a motivational programme added from end of intervention to 52”weeks further increases level of physical activity in everyday life in Patients with T1D.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating population divergence time and phylogeny from single-nucleotide polymorphisms data with outgroup ascertainment bias

TL;DR: In this article, a modification of an existing maximum likelihood method was proposed to allow approximately unbiased inference when ascertainment is based on a set of outgroup populations, and they also presented a method for estimating trees from the asymmetric dissimilarity measures arising from pairwise divergence time estimation in population genetics.