An efficient DNA compressor furnishes an approximation to measure and compare information quantities present in, between and across DNA sequences, regardless of the characteristics of the sources. In this paper, we compare directly two information measures, the Normalized Compression Distance (NCD) and the Normalized Relative Compression (NRC). These measures answer different questions; the NCD measures how similar both strings are (in terms of information content) and the NRC (which, in general, is nonsymmetric) indicates the fraction of one of them that cannot be constructed using information from the other one. This leads to the problem of finding out which measure (or question) is more suitable for the answer we need. For computing both...
Genomic data technology has advanced by using many algorithms that not only facilitate a meaningful ...
We present a new method for clustering based on compression. The method doesn't use subject-spe...
We define a compression distance, based on a normal compressor to show it is an admissible distance....
An efficient DNA compressor furnishes an approximation to measure and compare information quantities...
Genomic sequences are usually compared using evolutionary distance, a procedure that implies the ali...
The increase in memory and in network traffic used and caused by new sequenced biological data has r...
The exponential growth of high-throughput DNA sequence data has posed great challenges to genomic da...
Genomic sequences are usually compared using evolutionary distance, a procedure that implies the al...
The purpose of this project is to compare the complexities of different species\u27 mitochondrial ge...
Abstract—Sequence comparison is a fundamental tool in bioinformatics research since it helps to dist...
Relative compression, where a set of similar strings are compressed with respect to a reference stri...
Traditionally, intra-sequence similarity is exploited for compressing a single DNA sequence. Recentl...
Classical DNA sequence compression algorithms consider only intra-sequence similarity, i.e., similar...
The increasing volume of biological data requires finding new ways to save these data in genetic ban...
compression algorithms: the case of approximate tandem repeats in DNA sequences E.Rivals14, O.Delgra...
Genomic data technology has advanced by using many algorithms that not only facilitate a meaningful ...
We present a new method for clustering based on compression. The method doesn't use subject-spe...
We define a compression distance, based on a normal compressor to show it is an admissible distance....
An efficient DNA compressor furnishes an approximation to measure and compare information quantities...
Genomic sequences are usually compared using evolutionary distance, a procedure that implies the ali...
The increase in memory and in network traffic used and caused by new sequenced biological data has r...
The exponential growth of high-throughput DNA sequence data has posed great challenges to genomic da...
Genomic sequences are usually compared using evolutionary distance, a procedure that implies the al...
The purpose of this project is to compare the complexities of different species\u27 mitochondrial ge...
Abstract—Sequence comparison is a fundamental tool in bioinformatics research since it helps to dist...
Relative compression, where a set of similar strings are compressed with respect to a reference stri...
Traditionally, intra-sequence similarity is exploited for compressing a single DNA sequence. Recentl...
Classical DNA sequence compression algorithms consider only intra-sequence similarity, i.e., similar...
The increasing volume of biological data requires finding new ways to save these data in genetic ban...
compression algorithms: the case of approximate tandem repeats in DNA sequences E.Rivals14, O.Delgra...
Genomic data technology has advanced by using many algorithms that not only facilitate a meaningful ...
We present a new method for clustering based on compression. The method doesn't use subject-spe...
We define a compression distance, based on a normal compressor to show it is an admissible distance....