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Scott Schwartz

Researcher at Pennsylvania State University

Publications -  33
Citations -  20637

Scott Schwartz is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Sequence analysis. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 33 publications receiving 19294 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott Schwartz include Google & National Institutes of Health.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Initial sequencing and comparative analysis of the mouse genome.

Robert H. Waterston, +222 more
- 05 Dec 2002 - 
TL;DR: The results of an international collaboration to produce a high-quality draft sequence of the mouse genome are reported and an initial comparative analysis of the Mouse and human genomes is presented, describing some of the insights that can be gleaned from the two sequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

A greedy algorithm for aligning DNA sequences.

TL;DR: A new greedy alignment algorithm is introduced with particularly good performance and it is shown that it computes the same alignment as does a certain dynamic programming algorithm, while executing over 10 times faster on appropriate data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genome sequence of the Brown Norway rat yields insights into mammalian evolution

Richard A. Gibbs, +242 more
- 01 Apr 2004 - 
TL;DR: This first comprehensive analysis of the genome sequence of the Brown Norway (BN) rat strain is reported, which is the third complete mammalian genome to be deciphered, and three-way comparisons with the human and mouse genomes resolve details of mammalian evolution.

Genome sequence of the Brown Norway rat yields insights into mammalian evolutionRat Genome Sequencing Project ConsortiumNature200442849352115057822

Richard A. Gibbs, +226 more
Abstract: The laboratory rat (Rattus norvegicus) is an indispensable tool in experimental medicine and drug development, having made inestimable contributions to human health. We report here the genome sequence of the Brown Norway (BN) rat strain. The sequence represents a high-quality ‘draft’ covering over 90% of the genome. The BN rat sequence is the third complete mammalian genome to be deciphered, and three-way comparisons with the human and mouse genomes resolve details of mammalian evolution. This first comprehensive analysis includes genes and proteins and their relation to human disease, repeated sequences, comparative genome-wide studies of mammalian orthologous chromosomal regions and rearrangement breakpoints, reconstruction of ancestral karyotypes and the events leading to existing species, rates of variation, and lineage-specific and lineage-independent evolutionary events such as expansion of gene families, orthology relations and protein evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human–Mouse Alignments with BLASTZ

TL;DR: This work describes BLASTZ, an independent implementation of the Gapped BLAST algorithm specifically designed for aligning two long genomic sequences, and its modifications, the hardware environment on which it is run, and several empirical studies to validate its results.