:: NEWS COCKTAIL aka BlahBlahBlog ::

"Everything is being compressed into tiny tablets. You take a little pill of news every day - 23 minutes - and that's supposed to be enough." -Walter Cronkite, RE TV news. The Web has changed that for many, however, and here is an extra dose for your daily news cocktail. This prescription tends to include surveillance and now war-related links, along with the occasional pop culture junk and whatever else seizes my attention as I scan online news sites.
:: welcome to NEWS COCKTAIL aka BlahBlahBlog :: home | me ::
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"News is the first rough draft of history." -Philip L. Graham
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"Spending an evening on the World Wide Web is much like sitting down to a dinner of Cheetos, two hours later your fingers are yellow and you're no longer hungry, but you haven't been nourished." - Clifford Stoll

:: 1.22.2008 ::

:: "The Genome in High Resolution" ::

From Wired News

An ambitious plan to sequence and compare the genomes of 1,000 people promises to provide scientists with the most detailed picture yet of human genetic variation.

The 1000 Genomes Project, announced today and led by scientists from around the world, builds on the groundbreaking HapMap project. Launched in 2002, HapMap spotlighted regions of the genome that vary from person to person.

Any two people have 99% identical DNA; it's in the difference that the genetic roots of human development and disease variance exist. By marking "hotspots" where people tend to vary, the HapMap allows scientists to ignore overlap and focus on genomic areas of likely relevance.

Whole-genome association studies, considered to be the gold standard of modern genetics, owe their existence to the HapMap. In just a few years they've produced insights into whole networks of genes that appear implicated in many diseases, and have largely supplanted a hunt-for-a-single-gene model that geneticists now consider outdated. But for all its virtues, the HapMap is relatively limited: it only compared genomes from people in Nigeria, China and Japan, as well as people of Western European ancestry in the United States.

The 1000 Genomes Project promises to scan not only people from those areas, but from China, Italy and Kenya, along with Americans from Gujarat, China and Mexico. The new project will also tag areas where just one in a hundred people varies from the norm. The HapMap only tagged areas where at least 10% of people. In short, the HapMap was a magnifying glass; the 1000 Genome Project is a microscope.

International consortium announces the 1000 Genomes Project [press release]


A L S O

Project to map 1,000 people's DNA
Telegraph.co.uk

posted by me

:: 4:01:00 PM [+] ::
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