Microarray technology is more accessible than ever, and an ever-widening field of scientists is using this technology. However, the manufacture, experimental design, and analysis of microarrays are not always straightforward, and researchers new to the field run into technical and theoretical roadblocks that can hinder progress with this powerful new technology. "A Beginner's Guide to Microarrays" addresses two audiences - the core facility manager who produces, hybridizes, and scans arrays, and the basic research scientist who will be performing the analysis and interpreting the results. User friendly coverage and detailed protocols are provided for the technical steps and procedures involved in many facets of microarray technology, including: cleaning and coating glass slides; designing oligonucleotide probes; constructing arrays for the detection and quantification of different bacterial species; preparing spotting solutions; troubleshooting spotting problems; setting up and running a core facility; normalizing background signal and controlling for systematic variance; designing experiments for maximum effect; analyzing data with statistical procedures; and, clustering data with machine-learning protocols. This book is addressed to researchers using microarrays for the first time. One faces a myriad of problems at the outset of such a task, and there is no need to 'reinvent the wheel' for each scientist that runs into these problems. Knowing the strengths and weaknesses of microarrays before research begins can save time, money, and resources.
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