ATGC
ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

ATGC
ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

ATGC
ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

ATGC
ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

ATGC
ATGC
ATGC
ATGC
ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

ATGC

As part of the 2018 Cornell Biennial we used population-specific whole genome variation data, LED lights, and electrical wire to create a light installation which depicts a nucleotide by nucleotide walk through a global representation of human genomes.

Location: McGraw Tower clock faces, Cornell University central campus

Collaborators: Juan Felipe Beltrán, PhD student/Computational Biology, Yasir Ahmed-Braimah, PostDoc/Molecular Biology and Genetics, Josh Strable, PostDoc/Plant Biology

Acknowledgements: The Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), Cornell Chimes, and the Cornell Council for the Arts

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