Search for dissertations about: "ITS sequences"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 490 swedish dissertations containing the words ITS sequences.
-
1. Unlocking protein sequences : Advances in protein structure and ligand-binding site prediction
Abstract : The protein sequence determines how it will fold into its unique three-dimensional structure. Once folded, proteins perform their functions by interacting with other proteins or molecules called ligands within the cell. Experimental determination of protein structure and function is tedious. READ MORE
-
2. Planning Robotic Assembly Sequences
Abstract : In the automotive industry, short ramp up times and high product quality drive the development toward state-of-the-art solutions both in the research and industrial perspective. In addition to that, a sustainable industry requires optimized equipment utilization, in terms of materials used and consumed energy. READ MORE
-
3. Patterns of geographic variation in Silene section Elisanthe (Caryophyllaceae): hybridization and migrational history
Abstract : Large-scale patterns of genetic variation in chloroplast (cp) and nuclear DNA in the widespread European herb species Silene latifolia and S. dioica were investigated using cpPCR-RFLPs, non-coding cpDNA sequences, AFLPs and sequences of the internal transcribed spacers (ITS) of nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA). READ MORE
-
4. Sequence learning in the Bayesian Confidence Propagation Neural Network
Abstract : This thesis examines sequence learning in the Bayesian Confidence PropagationNeural Network (BCPNN). The methodology utilized throughout this work is com-putational and analytical in nature and the contributions here presented can beunderstood along the following four major themes: 1) this work starts by revisitingthe properties of the BCPNN as an attractor neural network and then provides anovel formalization of some of those properties. READ MORE
-
5. The Cyanophyte Arthrospira Fusiformis in African Waters - Eco-Physiology and Potential Use in Tropical Aquaculture
Abstract : The cyanoprokaryote (blue-green algae) genus Arthrospira occurs in saline, alkaline tropical waters of Africa, Asia, and Central America. Traditionally Arthrospira has been used as a food supplement by the Kanembu tribe of Lake Chad and Aztecs living in the valley of Mexico City. READ MORE