Geoffrey J. Barton has researched Sequence alignment in several fields, including Sequence analysis, Algorithm, World Wide Web, and Conserved sequence. His biological study deals with issues like Bioinformatics, which deal with fields such as Pipeline and UniProt.
Geoffrey J. Barton works mostly in the field of Genetics, limiting it down to topics relating to Computational biology and, in certain cases, Replication, Replicate, False positive paradox, RNA-Seq, and Nucleosome organization. The concepts of his Protein secondary structure study are interwoven with issues in Software, The Internet, and Data mining. His Protein structure research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives on Structural similarity and Peptide sequence.
Geoffrey J. Barton mainly focuses on Computational Biology, Genetics, Sequence alignment, Multiple sequence alignment, and Protein structure. His work focuses on many connections between Computational biology and other disciplines, such as RNA, that overlap with his field of interest in Gene expression and Transcription. Geoffrey J. Barton interconnects Protein secondary structure, Conserved sequence, Artificial intelligence, Algorithm, and Protein sequencing in the investigation of issues within Sequence alignment.
His research integrates issues of Crystallography and Software in his study of Protein secondary structure. In his work, Pattern matching is strongly intertwined with Bioinformatics, which is a subfield of Multiple sequence alignment. As a part of the same scientific family, he mostly works in the field of Protein structure, focusing on Peptide sequence and, on occasion, DNA microarray.