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- Before getting started, please note Similarity Check “Tips . . .
Before getting started, please note: The significance of the percentage similarity score should not be overweighed Please familiarise yourself with this post on understanding the similarity score It is important to understand the sources of any similarity in evaluating the weight they should be given
- Determining Domain Similarity and Domain-Protein Similarity . . .
The information and organizational structure provided by this ontology, and the extensive annotations of domains and proteins, stands as a useful foundation for considering domains and domain-protein similarity Also of use in measuring the similarity of annotation terms assigned to proteins is the InterPro database, which includes links to other database records, structural data, GO
- Peer Similarity in Adolescent Social Networks: Types of . . .
Selection Types Similarity-based selection may occur in active or passive ways Active selection refers out with certain peers because they prefer to do so, for instance, because they share simil
- Primer: Reactions - supportcontent. elsevier. com
Check the role Product Check the type of search to perform Tip! Reaction similarity search may offer a good way to find specific examples of general reactions Reaxys currently retrieves 859 Reaction records for this search To the right is an excerpt of one of the records *The exact workflow depends on the structure editor used
- Reaction Searching - Elsevier
Reaction Searching I would like to find information on the oxidative cleavage of c-c bonds (like those found in styrene) into carboxylic acids using silver-containing reagents catalysts
- The Similarity Index of Scientific Publications with . . .
In general, the existing similarity detection software is still unable to detect cross-language plagia-rism or self-plagiarism For scientific journals published by Elsevier and Springer, the maximum allowable similarity index of an article is usually 15% (excluding references) [9]
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