256
Hardware All the physical aspects of a computer (chassis, transistors, input and output
devices such as printers, memory disks, etc.).
Hidden Markov model Stochastic model that calculates certain transition probabilities
from an observable system state on the basis of a Markov chain and allows statements
about the hidden states.
Homology Protein Structure Prediction Method for predicting protein structure, using
known protein structures as templates.
Hypothesis-Free On the positive side, this is research that looks at the results without
bias and develops appropriate conclusions. On the other hand, it usually means expensive
omics experiments. For these, it is not a good idea to just produce a lot of data without an
initial scientific hypothesis and hope that the statistician will then find something “signifi
cant”. The following paper explains this problem very well: Ioannidis JPA (2005) Why
most published research findings are false. PLoS Med 2(8): e124.
In Silico Analysis with the computer, computer-assisted analysis. Literally: "in silicon"
(Latin).
Internet Protocol (IP for Short) Used to exchange data packets from computer to com
puter, so that this is done as quickly as possible, making use of all free space and also
coping with a major computer failure.
IP Abbreviation for the Internet Protocol (see there). Knowledge-based
Bioinformatics work, such as the creation of a network, based on literature and
expert knowledge.
Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA) or LCA Last common ancestor of all life,
which can be inferred bioinformatically via protein sequences and protein families (lived
about 2.5 billion years ago, 1000–1500 basic protein genes, the COGs [clusters of ortholo
gous genes; bacterial sequence families to genes with the same function] give an approxi
mate impression of these oldest genes).
Local Alignment Two sequences are compared by contrasting which amino acid resi
dues are modified and which are conserved (see also global alignment). In local alignment,
one looks for only one piece, especially very well, to catch a local piece that is particularly
similar, especially the domain that has the highest sequence similarity, i.e. a characteristic
domain of the protein. But then please remember that after that you should also examine
the other pieces in the protein and assign the function. For local alignment there is an exact
method, the Smith and Waterman search. This is slow, but accurate. Various heuristic
methods (not quite exact, but much faster with only a few errors) use this method, where
after a (FASTA; fast alignment) or a double (BLAST) fast index search then an exact
Smith and Waterman alignment is done.
18 Glossary