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Volume 4, Number 2—June 1998
Perspective

Accommodating Error Analysis in Comparison and Clustering of Molecular Fingerprints

Hugh Salamon*, Mark R. Segal*, Alfredo Ponce de Leon†, and Peter M. Small‡
Author affiliations: *University of California, San Francisco, California, USA; †Instituto Nacional Nutrición, Zubriran, Mexico City, Mexico; ‡Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, California, USA

Main Article

Figure 5

Prior to alignment of two sets of 2-banders, lanes are difficult to cluster (lanes a-d are from the distributions in Figure 4a and b). Subsequent to alignment, lanes are much easier to cluster (lanes a' and b' are specific examples from the distributions in Figure 4e and ff; lanes c' and d' likewise correspond to Figure 4g and h). Fragment lengths are given in kilobasepairs (kb).

Figure 5. Prior to alignment of two sets of 2-banders, lanes are difficult to cluster (lanes a-d are from the distributions in Figure 4a and b). Subsequent to alignment, lanes are much easier to cluster (lanes a' and b' are specific examples from the distributions in Figure 4e and ff; lanes c' and d' likewise correspond to Figure 4g and h). Fragment lengths are given in kilobasepairs (kb).

Main Article

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