With the amount of heterogeneous data that Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) is producing, many interesting computational problems are emerging and call for urgent solutions. Genome Browsers (e.g., IGB) are tools to visually compare and browse through multiple genomic feature samples aligned to the same genome reference and laid out on different genome browser tracks. They allow the visual inspection and identification of interesting “patterns” on multiple tracks, i.e. sets of genomic regions/peaks at given distances from each other in different genome browser tracks. Nevertheless, once such patterns are visually identified in a genome section, the search of their occurrences along the whole genome is a complex computational task currently n...