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Author Stephen Turner

Google's chief economist was recently quoted as saying "The sexy job in the next ten years will be statisticians… The ability to take data-to be able to understand it, to process it, to extract value from it, to visualize it, to communicate it-that’s going to be a hugely important skill." I'll leave you for the weekend with this ego-boosting article relating how our skill set as statisticians is a hot commodity in the real world.Dataspora Blog:

Published
Author Stephen Turner

Jason Moore at the previously mentioned Epistasis Blog has begun compiling a list of 100 papers every grad student should read, broken down by discipline. Right now the list is in its infancy, but it's a good start. I'll post here when the list is updated again.100 Publications Every Graduate Student Should ReadUPDATE 2009-05-08: The list has grown substantially since yesterday.

Published
Author Stephen Turner

If you're interested in gene-gene and gene-environment interaction (and who wouldn't be?), then you should check out the Epistasis Blog. Our friend and colleague Jason Moore at Dartmouth Medical School has maintained compgen.blogspot.com since 2005 writing about epistasis, computational genetics, and related topics.

Published
Author Stephen Turner

For those of you who attend our computational genetics journal club every other week, you've all heard about this. Say what you will about the "consumer genetics" enterprise, 23andMe maintains an excellent blog. In their "SNPwatch" category, The Spittoon surveys and summarizes the latest findings in human genetics research before they hit the press.