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Lingjing Jiang

Researcher at University of California, San Diego

Publications -  34
Citations -  13965

Lingjing Jiang is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Microbiome & Gut flora. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 34 publications receiving 6414 citations.

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Reproducible, interactive, scalable and extensible microbiome data science using QIIME 2

Evan Bolyen, +123 more
- 01 Aug 2019 - 
TL;DR: QIIME 2 development was primarily funded by NSF Awards 1565100 to J.G.C. and R.K.P. and partial support was also provided by the following: grants NIH U54CA143925 and U54MD012388.
Journal ArticleDOI

A communal catalogue reveals Earth’s multiscale microbial diversity

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of microbial community samples collected by hundreds of researchers for the Earth Microbiome Project is presented, creating both a reference database giving global context to DNA sequence data and a framework for incorporating data from future studies, fostering increasingly complete characterization of Earth’s microbial diversity.
Posted ContentDOI

QIIME 2: Reproducible, interactive, scalable, and extensible microbiome data science

Evan Bolyen, +119 more
- 24 Oct 2018 - 
TL;DR: QIIME 2 provides new features that will drive the next generation of microbiome research, including interactive spatial and temporal analysis and visualization tools, support for metabolomics and shotgun metagenomics analysis, and automated data provenance tracking to ensure reproducible, transparent microbiome data science.
Journal ArticleDOI

American Gut: an Open Platform for Citizen Science Microbiome Research.

Daniel McDonald, +64 more
TL;DR: The utility of the living data resource and cross-cohort comparison is demonstrated to confirm existing associations between the microbiome and psychiatric illness and to reveal the extent of microbiome change within one individual during surgery, providing a paradigm for open microbiome research and education.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phylogenetic Placement of Exact Amplicon Sequences Improves Associations with Clinical Information

TL;DR: The SATé-enabled phylogenetic placement (SEPP) technique explicitly against 16S V4 sequence fragments is benchmarked and it is shown that it outperforms the conceptually problematic but often-used practice of reconstructing de novo phylogenies.