Marvin, The first place I would point anyone to for a tremendous amount of valuable and easy to obtain information is this very same list and the associated website. I can't think of any other resource that has proved as indispensable for information as these two, for if it isn't here now, then it most certainly soon will be. Randy T. Fischer NIH/NIAMS Building 10, Room 6D57 9000 Rockville Pike Bethesda, MD 20892 (301) 594-3537 fischer1@mail.nih.gov > ---------- > From: jmarvin@flowcity.bsd.uchicago.edu > Sent: Monday, June 3, 2002 2:06 PM > To: Cytometry Mailing List > Subject: Teaching material > > > Hello, > I work in a flow core facility with many users and many applications. > However > I have not been in the flow cytometry field very long. I was hoping to > put > together some reading material that would be good for our users. So I > would > really appreciate some advice from some people that have been in the game > a > little longer. Do you have some hallmark papers that do a really good job > a > breaking down a particular application in flow cytometry? For example I > have > been giving users the apoptosis paper by Jerzy Grabarek and Zbigniew > Darzynkiewicz entitled Flow cytometry of Apoptosis that was given out > during a > workshop at the most recent ISAC conference. Its a great summary of the > pros > and cons, data analysis, and overall introduction to what seems to be the > most > common apoptosis assays. Since many of our users dont really have a grasp > on > the capabilities of flow cytometry, papers like these can be very eye > opening. > We have recently been putting together a Core Managers Resources website > linked > to our home page http://iacf.bsd.uchicago.edu/FlowHome/Flow_index.htm, I > would be happy to put my responses to this email on that website as a > reference > for others in the same situation. > > > Thanks in advance. James Marvin > >
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