BETHESDA, Md., Fri., Dec. 10, 2004 – The International HapMap Consortium today announced that it is ending computer-based "click wrap" license restrictions on data generated by its effort to create a ...
BETHESDA, Md., Mon., Feb. 7, 2005 – The International HapMap Consortium, boosted by an additional $3.3 million in public-private support, today announced plans to create an even more powerful map of ...
Mr. COLLINS: The HapMap scientists who came from six countries and labored long and hard over the last three years to do this project agreed from the outset that they would put all the data up on the ...
Three years after its launch, Phase I of the International HapMap project (HapMap) is now complete (The International HapMap Consortium. Nature 437, 1299–1320; 2005). The information is already ...
Phase II of the International HapMap Project has just been published, adding substantial amounts of human genetic variation data to the Phase I release and providing important insights for the design ...
The search for the causes of complex genetic diseases received a major boost today with the publication of the first map of human genetic variations, the subtle genetic changes that make each of us ...
The new repository will house genetic-research samples, including those collected for the International HapMap Project.The National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) has awarded a $3.1 million ...
Phase 1 of the International HapMap Project (http://www.hapmap.org), published in November 2005, was hailed by the mainstream press as a revolutionary tool for gene ...
Evaluation of 5-FU metabolism-relating enzyme gene expression levels using quantitative real-time RT-PCR from formalin fixed parafine embedded samples ...
Institute will establish a sample repository for populations next in line to be studied. The Coriell Institute for Medical Research was awarded a $3.1 million contract from the NHGRI to establish a ...
Many studies are based on the premise that a sample is representative of the larger body from which it was drawn. An article being published in Nature today 1 provides a guide for sampling the human ...
Your genome holds clues to where your ancestors came from – and what medical challenges you might have to deal with as a result. But there are also clues in there for overcoming those challenges.