flow's greatest hits
ThatJack@aol.com
Sat, 27 Jan 1996 11:53:26 -0500
Dear Colleagues,
If somebody asked you to name the greatest 3 or 4 papers in flow cytometry,
what would you say? Somebody just did.
I have recently been asked to teach a lecture course in Flow at San Francisco
State, and I would like to build it around the primary literature, using
applications of flow in Immunology, Cell Biology, Molecular Biology, and
Tumor Biology. I started compiling my list, and thought it would be
interesting to see just how bizarre my taste is (a scary thought) by asking
you all what you think. I'll post a heavily filtered list back to this
forum. Please feel free to refer to your own work, because I'll be gating
the data through a sophisticated anti-pomposity algorithm, which is biased
strongly in favor of those who promise beer and special favors.
I'm a little intimidated by the work this may be asking for. I'm most
interested in papers which established a technical benchmark which was used
to answer a good scientific question. I'd be happy to read a brief
description of your nominations if you choose to include one.
Thanks for your help,
Uncle Jack.
ThatJack@aol.com
CD ROM Vol 2 was produced by staff at the Purdue University Cytometry Laboratories
and distributed free of charge as an educational service to the cytometry community.
If you have any comments please direct them to Dr. J. Paul Robinson, Professor & Director, PUCL,
Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907. Phone:(317) 494-0757; FAX (317) 494-0517; Web http://www.cyto.purdue.edu
EMAIL robinson@flowcyt.cyto.purdue.edu