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readme.md
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readme.md
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## ABOUT
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This program simulates BiGpairSEQ (Bipartite Graph pairSEQ), a graph theory-based adaptation
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of the pairSEQ algorithm (Howie et al. 2015) for pairing T cell receptor sequences.
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of the pairSEQ algorithm (Howie, et al. 2015) for pairing T cell receptor sequences.
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## THEORY
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@@ -20,14 +20,13 @@ The problem of pairing TCRA/TCRB sequences thus reduces to the "assignment probl
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matching on a bipartite graph--the subset of vertex-disjoint edges whose weights sum to the maximum possible value.
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This is a well-studied combinatorial optimization problem, with many known solutions.
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The best currently-known algorithm for bipartite graphs with integer weights--which is what BiGpairSEQ uses--
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is from Duan and Su (2012). For a graph with m edges, n vertices per side, and maximum integer edge weight N,
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The best currently-known algorithm for bipartite graphs with integer weights--which is what BiGpairSEQ uses--is
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from Duan and Su (2012). For a graph with m edges, n vertices per side, and maximum integer edge weight N,
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their algorithm runs in **O(m sqrt(n) log(N))** time. This is the best known efficiency for finding a maximum weight
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matching on a bipartite graph, and the integer edge weight requirement makes it ideal for BiGpairSEQ.
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Unfortunately, it's a fairly new algorithm, and the integer edge weight requirement makes it less generically useful.
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It is not implemented by the graph theory library used in this simulator. So this program
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instead uses the Fibonacci heap-based algorithm of Fredman and Tarjan (1987), which has a worst-case
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Unfortunately, it's a fairly new algorithm. It is not implemented by the graph theory library used in this simulator.
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So this program instead uses the Fibonacci heap-based algorithm of Fredman and Tarjan (1987), which has a worst-case
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runtime of **O(n (n log(n) + m))**. The algorithm is implemented as described in Melhorn and Näher (1999).
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The current version of the program uses a pairing heap instead of a Fibonacci heap for its priority queue,
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@@ -81,9 +80,9 @@ writing files, the program will automatically add the correct extension to any f
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#### Cell Sample Files
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Cell Sample files consist of any number of distinct "T cells." Every cell contains
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four sequences: Alpha CDR3, Beta CDR, Alpha CDR1, Beta CDR1. The sequences are represented by
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random integers. CDR3 Alpha and Beta sequences are all unique. CDR1 Alpha and Beta sequences
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are not necessarily unique; the relative diversity can be set when making a Cell Sample file.
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four sequences: Alpha CDR3, Beta CDR3, Alpha CDR1, Beta CDR1. The sequences are represented by
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random integers. CDR3 Alpha and Beta sequences are all unique within a given Cell Sample file. CDR1 Alpha and Beta sequences
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are not necessarily unique; the relative diversity can be set when making the file.
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(Note: though cells still have CDR1 sequences, matching of CDR1s is currently awaiting re-implementation.)
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@@ -108,9 +107,9 @@ Structure:
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Sample Plate files consist of any number of "wells" containing any number of T cells (as
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described above). The wells are filled randomly from a Cell Sample file, according to a selected
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frequency distribution. Additionally, every individual sequence within each cell may, with some
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given dropout probability, be omitted from the file. This simulates the effect of amplification errors
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prior to sequencing. Plates can also be partitioned into any number of (approximately) evenly-sized
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sections, each of which can have a different number of T cells per well.
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given dropout probability, be omitted from the file; this simulates the effect of amplification errors
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prior to sequencing. Plates can also be partitioned into any number of sections, each of which can have a
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different concentration of T cells per well.
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Options when making a Sample Plate file:
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* Cell Sample file to use
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@@ -120,7 +119,7 @@ Options when making a Sample Plate file:
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* Standard deviation size
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* Exponential
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* Lambda value
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* Based on the slope of the graph in Figure 4C of the pairSEQ paper, the distribution of the original experiment was exponential with a lambda of approximately 0.6. (Howie et al. 2015)
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* (Based on the slope of the graph in Figure 4C of the pairSEQ paper, the distribution of the original experiment was exponential with a lambda of approximately 0.6. (Howie, et al. 2015))
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* Total number of wells on the plate
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* Number of sections on plate
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* Number of T cells per well
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@@ -128,13 +127,13 @@ Options when making a Sample Plate file:
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* Dropout rate
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Files are in CSV format. There are no header labels. Every row represents a well.
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Every column represents an individual cell, containing four sequences, represented by an array string:
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Every column represents an individual cell, containing four sequences, depicted as an array string:
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`[CDR3A, CDR3B, CDR1A, CDR1B]`. So a representative cell might look like this:
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`[525902, 791533, -1, 866282]`
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Notice that the Alpha CDR1 is missing in the cell above, due to sequence dropout.
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Dropouts are represented by replacing sequences with the value `-1`. Comments are preceded by `#`
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Notice that the CDR1 Alpha is missing in the cell above--sequence dropout from simulated amplification error.
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Dropout sequences are replaced with the value `-1`. Comments are preceded by `#`
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Structure:
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# Each row represents one well on the plate
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# Plate size:
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# Concentrations:
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# Lambda:
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# Lambda -or- StdDev:
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```
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| Well 1, cell 1 | Well 1, cell 2 | Well 1, cell 3| ... |
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|---|---|---|---|
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| **Well 2, cell 1** | **Well 2, cell 2** | **Well 2, cell 3**| ... |
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| **Well 3, cell 1** | **Well 3, cell 2** | **Well 3, cell 3**| ... |
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| ... | ... | ... | ... |
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| **Well 2, cell 1** | **Well 2, cell 2** | **Well 2, cell 3**| **...** |
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| **Well 3, cell 1** | **Well 3, cell 2** | **Well 3, cell 3**| **...** |
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| **...** | **...** | **...** | **...** |
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---
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#### Graph and Data Files
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Graph and Data files are serialized binaries of a Java object containing the graph representation of a
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Sample Plate and necessary metadata for matching and results output. Making them requires a Cell Sample file (to construct a list of correct sequence pairs for checking
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the accuracy of BiGpairSEQ simulations) and a Sample Plate file (to construct the associated
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occupancy graph). These files can be several gigabytes in size. Writing them to a file lets us generate a graph and
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its metadata once, then use it for multiple different BiGpairSEQ simulations.
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Graph and Data files are serialized binaries of a Java object containing the weigthed bipartite graph representation of a
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Sample Plate, along with the necessary metadata for matching and results output. Making them requires a Cell Sample file
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(to construct a list of correct sequence pairs for checking the accuracy of BiGpairSEQ simulations) and a
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Sample Plate file (to construct the associated occupancy graph). These files can be several gigabytes in size.
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Writing them to a file lets us generate a graph and its metadata once, then use it for multiple different BiGpairSEQ simulations.
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Options for creating a Graph and Data file:
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* The Cell Sample file to use
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* The Sample Plate file (generated from the given Cell Sample file) to use.
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* The Sample Plate file to use. (This must have been generated from the selected Cell Sample file.)
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These files do not have a human-readable structure, and are not portable to other programs. (Export of graphs in a
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portable data format may be implemented in the future. The tricky part is encoding the necessary metadata.)
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@@ -181,10 +180,9 @@ Options when running a BiGpairSEQ simulation of CDR3 alpha/beta matching:
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* The maximum number of alpha/beta overlap wells to attempt to match
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* (must be <= the number of wells on the plate - 1)
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* The maximum difference in alpha/beta occupancy to attempt to match
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* (To skip using this filter, enter a value >= the number of wells on the plate)
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* The minimum percentage of a sequence's occupied wells shared by another sequence to attempt to match
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* given value from 0 to 100
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* (To skip using this filter, enter 0)
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* (Optional. To skip using this filter, enter a value >= the number of wells on the plate)
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* The minimum overlap percentage--the percentage of a sequence's occupied wells shared by another sequence--to attempt to match. Given as value in range 0 - 100.
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* (Optional. To skip using this filter, enter 0)
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Example output:
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@@ -223,24 +221,26 @@ using the (2021 corrected) formula from the original pairSEQ paper. (Howie, et a
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## TODO
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* ~~Try invoking GC at end of workloads to reduce paging to disk~~ DONE
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* ~~Hold graph data in memory until another graph is read-in?~~
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* No, this won't work, because BiGpairSEQ simulations alter the underlying graph based on filtering constraints. Changes would cascade with multiple experiments.
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* ~~Hold graph data in memory until another graph is read-in?~~ ABANDONED
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* *No, this won't work, because BiGpairSEQ simulations alter the underlying graph based on filtering constraints. Changes would cascade with multiple experiments.*
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* See if there's a reasonable way to reformat Sample Plate files so that wells are columns instead of rows.
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* ~~Problem is variable number of cells in a well~~
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* ~~Apache Commons CSV library writes entries a row at a time~~
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* _Got this working, but at the cost of a profoundly strange bug in graph occupancy filtering. Have reverted the repo until I can figure out what caused that. Given how easily Thingiverse transposes CSV matrices in R, might not even be worth fixing._
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* Re-implement command line arguments, to enable scripting and statistical simulation studies
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* Implement sample plates with random numbers of T cells per well.
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* Possible BiGpairSEQ advantage over pairSEQ: BiGpairSEQ is resilient to variations in well populations; pairSEQ is not.
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* preliminary data suggests that BiGpairSEQ behaves roughly as though the whole plate had whatever the *average* well concentration is, but that's still speculative.
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* Enable GraphML output in addition to serialized object binaries, for data portability
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* Custom vertex type with attribute for sequence occupancy?
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* Re-implement CDR1 matching method
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* Re-implement command line arguments, to enable scripting and statistical simulation studies
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* Implement Duan and Su's maximum weight matching algorithms
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* Implement Duan and Su's maximum weight matching algorithm
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* Add controllable algorithm-type parameter?
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* Test whether pairing heap (currently used) or Fibonacci heap is more efficient for current matching algorithm
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* Test whether pairing heap (currently used) or Fibonacci heap is more efficient for priority queue in current matching algorithm
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* in theory Fibonacci heap should be more efficient, but complexity overhead may eliminate theoretical advantage
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* Add controllable heap-type parameter?
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* Implement sample plates with random numbers of T cells per well
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* Possible BiGpairSEQ advantage over pairSEQ: BiGpairSEQ is resilient to variations in well populations; pairSEQ is not.
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* preliminary data suggests that BiGpairSEQ behaves roughly as though the whole plate had whatever the *average* well concentration is, but that's still speculative.
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* See if there's a reasonable way to reformat Sample Plate files so that wells are columns instead of rows
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* Problem is variable number of cells in a well
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* Apache Commons CSV library writes entries a row at a time
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* Can possibly sort the wells by length first, then construct entries
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## CITATIONS
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* Howie, B., Sherwood, A. M., et al. ["High-throughput pairing of T cell receptor alpha and beta sequences."](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26290413/) Sci. Transl. Med. 7, 301ra131 (2015)
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@@ -259,4 +259,4 @@ BiGpairSEQ was conceived in collaboration with Dr. Alice MacQueen, who brought t
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pairSEQ paper to the author's attention and explained all the biology terms he didn't know.
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## AUTHOR
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Eugene Fischer, 2021. UI improvements and documentation, 2022.
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BiGpairSEQ algorithm and simulation by Eugene Fischer, 2021. UI improvements and documentation, 2022.
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