Difference between revisions of "NHLBI Informatics Resource"
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− | The '''Informatics Resource Core''' provides advice to participating | + | The '''Informatics Resource Core''' provides advice to studies participating in a landmark NHLBI initiative to sequence 20,000 human genomes in 2015, as well as to sequencing centers and staff at the National Institutes of Health on the handling, processing and interpretation of large scale sequence data. The IRC will also be responsible for producing a joint analysis of available sequence data and aiding study investigators with informatics challenges when needed, particularly for cross study analyses. Long-term, a major goal of the Informatics Resource Center is to make study results easily accessible to a broad range of scientists. |
== Key Individuals == | == Key Individuals == | ||
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* Irina Degtiar is a graduate student helping with data processing issues | * Irina Degtiar is a graduate student helping with data processing issues | ||
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+ | == Key Technologies == | ||
+ | |||
+ | To learn about some of the tools we have developed and will be using in this project, read about our [[GotCloud]] pipeline for sequence alignment, variant calling, and filtering, our [[EPACTS]] tool for association analyses with very large data, [[RAREMETAL]] for combining results across studies, [[LocusZoom]] for visualizing study results, [[Minimac]] (now in [[Minimac3|version 3]] and [http://imputationserver.sph.umich.edu/ online]] for genotype imputation, which helps transfer sequence information from sequencing studies to array based studies and [[QPLOT]] and [[VerifyBamID]] for QC of sequence data. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Partners == | ||
+ | |||
+ | We are thrilled to work with outstanding scientists at the University of Washington, the Broad Institute, the New York Genome Center, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard, the University of Maryland, UCSF, the University of Texas, the University of Mississippi, and the National Institutes of Health among other outstanding teams. |
Latest revision as of 01:04, 31 January 2015
The Informatics Resource Core provides advice to studies participating in a landmark NHLBI initiative to sequence 20,000 human genomes in 2015, as well as to sequencing centers and staff at the National Institutes of Health on the handling, processing and interpretation of large scale sequence data. The IRC will also be responsible for producing a joint analysis of available sequence data and aiding study investigators with informatics challenges when needed, particularly for cross study analyses. Long-term, a major goal of the Informatics Resource Center is to make study results easily accessible to a broad range of scientists.
Key Individuals
- Goncalo Abecasis is Informatics Resource Lead
- Mike Boehnke is a senior advisor, with focus on strategy and management issues
- Cristen Willer is a senior advisor, with focus on complex trait genetics and interpretation
- Hyun Min Kang is our expert on algorithms for sequence data processing
- Sebastian Zoellner is in charge of population genetics
- Shawn Lee is expert in rare variant association analyses
- Mary Kate Wing is our lead developer
- Tom Blackwell is the contact with the DCC and NCBI
- Sean Caron manages our compute and network infrastructure
- Irina Degtiar is a graduate student helping with data processing issues
Key Technologies
To learn about some of the tools we have developed and will be using in this project, read about our GotCloud pipeline for sequence alignment, variant calling, and filtering, our EPACTS tool for association analyses with very large data, RAREMETAL for combining results across studies, LocusZoom for visualizing study results, Minimac (now in version 3 and online] for genotype imputation, which helps transfer sequence information from sequencing studies to array based studies and QPLOT and VerifyBamID for QC of sequence data.
Partners
We are thrilled to work with outstanding scientists at the University of Washington, the Broad Institute, the New York Genome Center, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard, the University of Maryland, UCSF, the University of Texas, the University of Mississippi, and the National Institutes of Health among other outstanding teams.