Skip to main content

Volume 20 Supplement 20

Proceedings of the 17th Annual Research in Computational Molecular Biology (RECOMB) Comparative Genomics Satellite Workshop: Bioinformatics

Research

Publication of this supplement has not been supported by sponsorship. Information about the source of funding for publication charges can be found in the individual articles. The articles have undergone the journal's standard peer review process for supplements. The Supplement Editors declare that they have no competing interests.

Montpellier, France1-4 October 2019

Edited by Krister M. Swenson, Mathias Weller, Sèverine Bérard and Annie Chateau

Conference website

Related articles are published as a supplement to BMC Genomics

  1. Maximum parsimony reconciliation in the duplication-transfer-loss model is widely used in studying the evolutionary histories of genes and species and in studying coevolution of parasites and their hosts and p...

    Authors: Santi Santichaivekin, Ross Mawhorter and Ran Libeskind-Hadas
    Citation: BMC Bioinformatics 2019 20(Suppl 20):636
  2. Bacterial pathogens exhibit an impressive amount of genomic diversity. This diversity can be informative of evolutionary adaptations, host-pathogen interactions, and disease transmission patterns. However, cap...

    Authors: Guo Liang Gan, Elijah Willie, Cedric Chauve and Leonid Chindelevitch
    Citation: BMC Bioinformatics 2019 20(Suppl 20):637
  3. In many fields of biomedical research, it is important to estimate phylogenetic distances between taxa based on low-coverage sequencing reads. Major applications are, for example, phylogeny reconstruction, spe...

    Authors: Anna-Katharina Lau, Svenja Dörrer, Chris-André Leimeister, Christoph Bleidorn and Burkhard Morgenstern
    Citation: BMC Bioinformatics 2019 20(Suppl 20):638
  4. Reconciliation methods are widely used to explain incongruence between a gene tree and species tree. However, the common approach of inferring maximum parsimony reconciliations (MPRs) relies on user-defined co...

    Authors: Ross Mawhorter, Nuo Liu, Ran Libeskind-Hadas and Yi-Chieh Wu
    Citation: BMC Bioinformatics 2019 20(Suppl 20):639
  5. Many cancer genomes are extensively rearranged with highly aberrant chromosomal karyotypes. Structural and copy number variations in cancer genomes can be determined via abnormal mapping of sequenced reads to ...

    Authors: Sergey Aganezov, Ilya Zban, Vitaly Aksenov, Nikita Alexeev and Michael C. Schatz
    Citation: BMC Bioinformatics 2019 20(Suppl 20):641

Annual Journal Metrics

  • 2022 Citation Impact
    3.0 - 2-year Impact Factor
    4.3 - 5-year Impact Factor
    0.938 - SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper)
    1.100 - SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)

    2023 Speed
    19 days submission to first editorial decision for all manuscripts (Median)
    146 days submission to accept (Median)

    2023 Usage
    5,987,678 downloads
    4,858 Altmetric mentions 

Sign up for article alerts and news from this journal