|
Volumn 3, Issue 6, 2002, Pages 498-502
|
Coding or non-coding, that is the question. Having solved the last technical hurdles to extract DNA information from virtually any biological material, forensic biologists now have to ponder the ethical and social questions of using information from exonic DNA
a
a
NONE
|
Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
|
Indexed keywords
DNA;
ARTICLE;
CRIMINAL JUSTICE;
DNA EXTRACTION;
DNA FINGERPRINTING;
DNA HYBRIDIZATION;
EXON;
FORENSIC IDENTIFICATION;
FORENSIC MEDICINE;
GENE MUTATION;
GENETIC VARIABILITY;
HUMAN;
INTRON;
LEGAL ASPECT;
MEDICAL ETHICS;
POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION;
PRIORITY JOURNAL;
RESTRICTION FRAGMENT LENGTH POLYMORPHISM;
SOCIAL ASPECT;
TANDEM REPEAT;
CIVIL RIGHTS;
CONFIDENTIALITY;
ETHICS;
GENETIC DATABASE;
GENETIC MARKER;
GENETICS AND REPRODUCTION;
ISOLATION AND PURIFICATION;
PATERNITY;
GENETICS AND REPRODUCTION;
CIVIL RIGHTS;
CONFIDENTIALITY;
DATABASES, GENETIC;
DNA;
DNA FINGERPRINTING;
EXONS;
FORENSIC MEDICINE;
GENETIC MARKERS;
HUMANS;
INTRONS;
PATERNITY;
POLYMORPHISM, RESTRICTION FRAGMENT LENGTH;
|
EID: 0036308132
PISSN: 1469221X
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1093/embo-reports/kvf121 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (7)
|
References (17)
|