Carlos D. Bustamante Lab
 
Bustamante Lab Template

Macaque Genome Deciphered; May Herald Medical Breakthroughs - 04/17/2007
  • National Geographic News  Link
A study in contrast - 04/6/2007
  • Baltimore Sun  Link
How DNA sequence divides chihuahua and great dane - 04/6/2007
  • The Guardian  Link
DNA study sheds light on dog size - 04/6/2007

Welcome to the Bustamante lab web page!

Here you will find information regarding the research interests of the group, recent publications, current and former lab members, and a calendar with upcoming events at Cornell related to our research interests (including the population genetics journal club run through our lab).

The Bustamante group works on developing statistical methods for inference in population and comparative genomics. We are particularly interested in approaches for testing evolutionary hypothesis regarding the importance of natural selection and demographic history in patterning genetic variation. Much of our work deals with development of population genetic theory as well as application of our tools to make inference from genome-wide data sets. We have recently become very interested in methods for association mapping in natural and domesticated populations. We work on a variety of organisms including:

Mammals
  • Humans
  • Macaques
  • Canines
  • Rodents
Plants
  • Rice
  • Arabidopsis
Bacteria
  • E. Coli / Salmonella
Drosophila
 
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