Search references for PYCLONE. Phrases containing PYCLONE
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PyClone is a software that implements a Hierarchical Bayes statistical model to estimate cellular frequency patterns of mutations in a population of cancer
PyClone
Observation of the diversity of tumour cells
computational methods were developed including Clomial, cloneHD, PhyloWGS, PyClone, Cloe, phyC, Canopy, TargetClone, ddClone, PASTRI, GLClone, TRaIT, WSCUnmix
Tumour_heterogeneity
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Girl/Female
Arabic, Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Muslim, Sanskrit
Soul; A River in Afghanistan; Rising; Up; Red; A Doe
Surname or Lastname
English
English : of uncertain origin. Reaney explains this as a nickname for a person who is difficult to shake off, from Middle English bur(r) ‘bur’ (a seedhead that sticks to clothing). Burre occurs as a surname or byname as early as 1185, but the vocabulary word is not recorded in OED until the 14th century. Another possibility is derivation from Old English būr ‘small dwelling or building’ (modern English bower), but there are phonological difficulties here too.German : perhaps a variant spelling of Bur, or a topographic name from Burr(e) ‘mound’, ‘hill’, or in the south a variant of Burrer.The American political leader Aaron Burr (1756–1836) was the son of a clergyman and academic, president of Princeton University. On his mother’s side he was descended from the Puritan preacher Jonathan Edwards; on his father’s from Jehu Burr, who emigrated from England with John Winthrop to MA in 1630.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Bodyguard
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British, English
Town by a Clay Bed
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Hindu
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Master; King of the World
Girl/Female
German
Wanderer
Boy/Male
English
Place.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Devon, recorded in Domesday Book as Loba, apparently a topographical term meaning perhaps ‘lump’, ‘hill’, the village being situated at the bottom of a hill. There is also a place of the same name in Oxfordshire (recorded in 1208 as Lobbe), but the historical and contemporary distribution of the surname (which is still largely restricted to Devon), makes it unlikely that it ever derived from this place, or from Middle English, Old English lobbe ‘spider’.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Acyutaraya | அசà¯à®¯à¯à®¤à®°à®¾à®¯à®¾
Worshipper of the infallible, A devotee of Vishnu
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