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. 1986 Jan 10;14(1):141–158. doi: 10.1093/nar/14.1.141

Sequence landscapes.

B Clift, D Haussler, R McConnell, T D Schneider, G D Stormo
PMCID: PMC339363  PMID: 3753762

Abstract

We describe a method for representing the structure of repeating sequences in nucleic-acids, proteins and other texts. A portion of the sequence is presented at the bottom of a CRT screen. Above the sequence is its landscape, which looks like a mountain range. Each mountain corresponds to a subsequence of the sequence. At the peak of every mountain is written the number of times that the subsequence appears. A data structure called a DAWG, which can be built in time proportional to the length of the sequence, is used to construct the landscape. For the 40 thousand bases of bacteriophage T7, the DAWG can be built in 30 seconds. The time to display any portion of the landscape is less than a second. Using sequence landscapes, one can quickly locate significant repeats.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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