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Sarah B. Kingan

Researcher at Pacific Biosciences

Publications -  56
Citations -  4751

Sarah B. Kingan is an academic researcher from Pacific Biosciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Population. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 51 publications receiving 2975 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah B. Kingan include University of Arizona & Brown University.

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Towards complete and error-free genome assemblies of all vertebrate species

Arang Rhie, +144 more
- 28 Apr 2021 - 
TL;DR: The Vertebrate Genomes Project (VGP) as mentioned in this paper is an international effort to generate high quality, complete reference genomes for all of the roughly 70,000 extant vertebrate species and to help to enable a new era of discovery across the life sciences.
Posted ContentDOI

Towards complete and error-free genome assemblies of all vertebrate species

Arang Rhie, +121 more
- 23 May 2020 - 
TL;DR: The Vertebrate Genomes Project is embarked on, an effort to generate high-quality, complete reference genomes for all ~70,000 extant vertebrate species and help enable a new era of discovery across the life sciences.
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Improved reference genome of Aedes aegypti informs arbovirus vector control

Benjamin J. Matthews, +87 more
- 14 Nov 2018 - 
TL;DR: An improved, fully re-annotated Aedes aegypti genome assembly (AaegL5) provides insights into the sex-determining M locus, chemosensory systems that help mosquitoes to hunt humans and loci involved in insecticide resistance and will help to generate intervention strategies to fight this deadly disease vector.
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De novo assembly of haplotype-resolved genomes with trio binning.

TL;DR: This work used trio binning to recover both haplotypes of a diploid human genome and identified complex structural variants missed by alternative approaches, topping the quality of current cattle reference genomes.
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Speciation in birds: genes, geography, and sexual selection.

TL;DR: The challenge for ornithologists is to inform well studied examples of speciation in nature with increased molecular resolution—to clone speciation genes if they exist—and thereby evaluate the relative roles of extrinsic, intrinsic, deterministic, and stochastic causes for avian diversification.