Journal Article10.1109/MAES.2013.6575402
What is a tutorial
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TL;DR: There are two kinds of tutorial articles: those that provide a primer on an established topic and those that let us in on the ground floor of something of emerging importance.
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Abstract: There are two kinds of tutorial articles: those that provide a primer on an established topic and those that let us in on the ground floor of something of emerging importance. The first type of tutorial can have a noted expert who has been gracious (and brave) enough to write a field guide about a particular topic. The other sort of tutorial typically involves researchers who have each been laboring on a topic for some years. Both sorts of tutorial articles are very much desired. But we, as an editorial board for both Systems and Transactions, know that there has been no logical place for them in the AESS until this series was started several years ago. With these tutorials, we hope to continue to give them a home, a welcome, and provide a service to our membership. We do not intend to publish tutorials on a regular basis, but we hope to deliver them once or twice per year. We need and welcome good, useful tutorial articles (both kinds) in relevant AESS areas. If you, the reader, can offer a topic of interest and an author to write about it, please contact us. Self-nominations are welcome, and even more ideal is a suggestion of an article that the editor(s) can solicit. All articles will be reviewed in detail. Criteria on which they will be judged include their clarity of presentation, relevance, and likely audience, and, of course, their correctness and scientific merit. As to the mathematical level, the articles in this issue are a good guide: in each case the author has striven to explain complicated topics in simple-well, tutorial-terms. There should be no (or very little) novel material: the home for archival science is the Transactions Magazine, and submissions that need to be properly peer reviewed would be rerouted there. Likewise, articles that are interesting and descriptive, but lack significant tutorial content, ought more properly be submitted to the Systems Magazine.
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References
•Journal Article
A Tissue-Based Map of the Human Proteome
TL;DR: A genome-wide analysis of the tissue specificity of RNA and protein expression covering more than 90% of the putative protein-coding genes is reported, complemented with analyses of various subproteomes, such as predicted secreted proteins and membrane-bound proteins.
7.6K
•Book
Doing Bayesian Data Analysis: A Tutorial with R, JAGS, and Stan
John K. Kruschke
- 17 Nov 2014
TL;DR: Doing Bayesian Data Analysis: A Tutorial with R, JAGS, and Stan provides an accessible approach to Bayesian data analysis, as material is explained clearly with concrete examples.
2.1K
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Matthew M. Gubin,Xiuli Zhang,Heiko Schuster,Etienne Caron,Jeffrey P. Ward,Takuro Noguchi,Yulia Ivanova,Jasreet Hundal,Cora D. Arthur,Willem Jan Krebber,Gwenn E. Mulder,Mireille Toebes,Matthew D. Vesely,Samuel S. K. Lam,Alan J. Korman,James P. Allison,Gordon J. Freeman,Arlene H. Sharpe,Erika L. Pearce,Ton N. Schumacher,Ruedi Aebersold,Hans-Georg Rammensee,Cornelis J. M. Melief,Elaine R. Mardis,William E. Gillanders,Maxim N. Artyomov,Robert D. Schreiber +26 more
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TL;DR: This work was funded by a grant from The Health Foundation (London, UK) that supported HR, KG, and NS.
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