vBulletin FAQ
The website where you learn about vBulletin Forums
Home   Download vBulletin   vBulletin FAQ Forums vBulletin Related Sites Contact Us
Welcome to vBulletin FAQ

vBulletin FAQ Navigation

Getting Started

Customizing your vBulletin

Search Engines & SEO

Making Money with a Forum

Promoting your Community

Get your own vBulletin Today


Webmaster Help


Bioinformatics For Dummies (For Dumm (Math & Science))





vBulletin Book Store > vBulletin books beginning with B

More details of book titled: Bioinformatics For Dummies (For Dumm (Math & Science))

Bioinformatics For Dummies (For Dumm (Math & Science))

Author: Jean-Michel, Ph. D. Claverie
Published: 2006-12-18
List price: $29.99
Our price: $19.79
Usually ships in 24 hours
As of: October 06th, 2008 07:24:26 PM
Customer comments on this selection.

vBulletin Overall a Good Book on Bioinformatics
This is overall a good book on bioinformatics. If you like the Dummy series, you will like this book. It's more thorough on the biology side of bioinformatics than on the "information" side. However, the concepts are explained in an easy to understand fashion. Worth the price.


vBulletin Thorough, in-depth introduction. The "for dummies" is misleading
Many people are derisive about the "for Dummies" series, believing them to be too simplistic and sometimes even an insult to their intelligence. That can hardly apply to this book, as there is nothing "dummy" about it. You need a significant background in biology and chemistry in order to understand most of it. You need to understand the amino acid structure of proteins, the structure of DNA and many fundamental principles of data analysis. Some knowledge of the structure and operations of databases is also needed. The authors include a large number of web sites containing additional information and that can run analyses.
The coverage is so thorough and detailed that this is the only "for dummies" book that I have seen that could honestly be recommended as a college text. And not just at the freshman level either.


vBulletin Using the free software on internet sites to help your research
The first chapter is a short review of DNA and RNA sequences, amino acids, and protein. The other chapters teach you to use the free software found on the Internet to work with your research. Information is also given which helps explain some biochemicals. My skills are in Software Development using C++ language, and I need more information on biochemicals to understand the problems and to develop algorithms to solve them.
My only criticism is that I would like the book to give more biochemical theory before taking up the subject of Internet software.
Overall, this is a good beginner's book on biochemistry.




vBulletin Good
I am a couple years into a PhD in bioinformatics, but this is the book I started with. I knew some biology and some computer science, but I still found a lot of the databases, etc. confusing and the field has a decided lack of simplified documentation (though it is getting better).

Of course, bioinformatics is a pretty broad topic and no book could possibly cover everything.

If you do not know any biology at all you probably should also get a basic text on genetics/molecular biology (or read thema at the NCBI web site books section for free). You don't need anything in depth to read the dummies book, just at the level of an introductory biology book. Hint: DNA to RNA, RNA to Protein. And you want to know why proteins are similar because proteins with similar amino acid sequences often have similar chemical properties and therefore similar functions, so if you know what one protein does you can guess what a protein like it probably does.
:-)

And despite the name of the book the authors are REAL bioinformaticists (T-Coffee rocks!)


vBulletin Yes, It's Really Written at the For Dummies Level.
This book kind of blew me away. Bioinformatics is such a big word.

Then in the second chapter they tell you 'How Most People Use Bioinformatics.' And all of a sudden they have you on line to the National Library of Medicine at the National Institute of Health. They have you looking at protein sequences, and you even understand what they are saying.

This is a 'For Dummies' book. It is written in their traditional style, assuming that you know very little -- well to be sure they say they are making the assumption that 'You likely have a background in molecular biology. If you don't - or if you need to brush up on your molecular biology - Chapter 1 gives you a brief overview of the basics.'

I found that the first few chapters went down pretty easily. By part IV it had gone further than I wanted to go, and I quit reading.

BUT if I were going to be taking a course in bioinformatics, or even thinking about taking such a course, or just looking at a degree in biology, I'd spend a week or two getting around this book. It's written a hell of a lot better than any text you're likely to get assigned, and at its price it's quite a deal.


Similar Listings

Book cover of Genetics For Dummies (For Dummies (Math & Science)).Genetics For Dummies (For Dummies (Math & Science))
Book cover of Developing Bioinformatics Computer Skills.Developing Bioinformatics Computer Skills
Book cover of Essential Bioinformatics.Essential Bioinformatics
Book cover of Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics.Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics
Book cover of Molecular Biology Made Simple and Fun, Third Edition.Molecular Biology Made Simple and Fun, Third Edition
Our vBulletin book picks:


Find more vBulletin related products of interest.

Search:
Keywords:
Amazon Logo

Purchase vBulletin - Site Map - vBulletin Forum
Copyright © 2006 vBulletin-FAQ.com. All rights reserved.
This website is not affilliated with Jelsoft or vBulletin.
Forums - Archive