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The 1000 Genomes Project: data management and community access

by: Laura Clarke, Xiangqun Zheng-Bradley, Richard Smith, Eugene Kulesha, Chunlin Xiao, Iliana Toneva, Brendan Vaughan, Don Preuss, Rasko Leinonen, Martin Shumway, Stephen Sherry, Paul Flicek
Nature Methods, Vol. 9, No. 5. (27 April 2012), pp. 459-462, doi:10.1038/nmeth.1974  Key: citeulike:10616443

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Abstract

The 1000 Genomes Project was launched as one of the largest distributed data collection and analysis projects ever undertaken in biology. In addition to the primary scientific goals of creating both a deep catalog of human genetic variation and extensive methods to accurately discover and characterize variation using new sequencing technologies, the project makes all of its data publicly available. Members of the project data coordination center have developed and deployed several tools to enable widespread data access.


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