Wavelet trees, part 2
We discuss the space required to store wavelet trees and the time required to answer queries. We discuss this both for balanced and for Huffman-shaped trees. ── Course & channel links ── Course playlist: Burrows-Wheeler Indexing • Burrows-Wheeler Indexing ── About the author ── Ben Langmead is a Professor of Computer Science at Johns Hopkins University, where his research spans bioinformatics, computational biology, and data-intensive science. He is the author of Bowtie and Bowtie 2; his group has also developed software like Kraken 2 and resources like recount3 and Index Zone, as well as methods for pangenome indexing and querying, based on e.g. the r-index and move structure. His group's methods have been cited over 130,000 times, and he is the winner of awards including an NSF CAREER award, a Sloan Research Fellowship, the Benjamin Franklin award for contributions to open access, and multiple awards for teaching and mentorship. Ben is the founder and principal of InOrder Labs LLC (https://inorderlabs.com), an expert consulting firm in bioinformatics and computational biology. Channel: / @benlangmead Teaching materials: https://langmead-lab.org/teaching.html

FM Index, part 1: efficient reversal

Wavelet trees, part 1

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Burrows-Wheeler Transform, part 2

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