Virginia Tech
Member
As the commonwealth’s most comprehensive university and a leading research institution, Virginia Tech offers about 280 degree programs to more than 37,000 undergraduate, graduate, and professional students across the commonwealth and manages a research portfolio of more than $550 million. The university fulfills its role as a land-grant institution by fostering a collaborative environment that integrates technology into all disciplines, so that the Virginia Tech community can serve as a force for positive change around the commonwealth, the country, and the world.
Virginia Tech's Articles
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Citation: BMC Bioinformatics 2006 7:218
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The statistics of identifying differentially expressed genes in Expresso and TM4: a comparison
Citation: BMC Bioinformatics 2006 7:215 -
Molecular targets for rapid identification of Brucella spp
Citation: BMC Microbiology 2006 6:13 -
Distinct patterns of SSR distribution in the Arabidopsis thalianaand rice genomes
Citation: Genome Biology 2006 7:R14 -
Comparison of assessment techniques: plasma lipid and lipoproteins related to the metabolic syndrome
Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2006 5:3 -
Opportunities for detection and use of QTL influencing seasonal reproduction in sheep: a review
Citation: Genetics Selection Evolution 2005 37(Suppl 1):S39 -
Mitochondrial-encoded membrane protein transcripts are pyrimidine-rich while soluble protein transcripts and ribosomal RNA are purine-rich
Citation: BMC Genomics 2005 6:136 -
Comparison of standard exponential and linear techniques to amplify small cDNA samples for microarrays
Citation: BMC Genomics 2005 6:61 -
Secondary structure in the target as a confounding factor in synthetic oligomer microarray design
Citation: BMC Genomics 2005 6:31 -
Review of, "Biostatistics and Epidemiology" by S. Wassertheil-Smoller
Citation: BioMedical Engineering OnLine 2004 3:36 -
Calcineurin activation influences muscle phenotype in a muscle-specific fashion
Citation: BMC Cell Biology 2004 5:28 -
Bayesian QTL mapping using skewed Student-t distributions
Citation: Genetics Selection Evolution 2002 34:1 -
A possible dominant white gene in Jersey cattle
Citation: Genetics Selection Evolution 2001 33:61