Michael Christopher Wendl

Michael Wendl
NationalityAmerican
Known forPhred base calling
Couette flow[2]
DNA sequencing theory
Scientific career
FieldsComputational biology
Probability
Doctoral advisorRamesh K. Agarwal[1]
Other academic advisorsBob Waterston (post-doctoral)
Websitewendl.weebly.com

Michael Christopher Wendl is a mathematician and biomedical engineer who has worked on DNA sequencing theory,[3] covering and matching problems in probability, theoretical fluid mechanics, and co-wrote Phred.[4] He was a scientist on the Human Genome Project and has done bioinformatics and biostatistics work in cancer. Wendl is of ethnic German heritage and is the son of the aerospace engineer Michael J. Wendl.[5]

  1. ^ "Michael Wendl - the Mathematics Genealogy Project".
  2. ^ Bordag LA et al. (2005) Interaction of a rotational motion and an axial flow in small geometries for a Taylor–Couette problem , J. Fluids and Structures 20(5), 621–641. The authors comment directly on Wendl's solution appearing so long after the classical problem discussed by Stokes in 1845: "It is also a bit astonishing that the exact analytical solution for the azimuthal component of the Taylor–Couette flow profile with boundary conditions on cylinder caps was obtained just recently in the work of Wendl (1999). His results expose the strong influence of caps on flow profiles."
  3. ^ Dorman, N (2006) The long and short of it, BioTechniques 41(4), pp 367.
  4. ^ Ewing, B., Hillier, L., Wendl, M.C., and Green, P. (1998) Base-calling of automated sequencer traces using phred. I. Accuracy assessment. Genome Research 8(3), 175–185. PMID 9521921 full article
  5. ^ P Hummel and N Fuhry: "Sackelhausen im Banat" Volume 3, published by Heimatsortsgemeinschaft Sackelhausen, Reutlingen FRG, 2007, pages 2236-2237.