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Cloning, Then and Now

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 1998
Abstract The possibility of human cloning first surfaced in the 1960s, stimulated by the report that a salamander had been cloned. James D. Watson and Joshua Lederberg, distinguished Nobel laureates, speculated that the cloning of human beings might one day be within reach; it was only a matter of time.
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When is a clone not a clone?

Trends in Genetics, 2001
Despite recent successes in cloning animals of several different species using nuclear transfer (NT), the process is far from efficient. The production rate of cloned offspring is low because of increased abortions, and many fetuses that survive show abnormal symptoms, such as high birth-weight.
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The future of cloning

Nature, 1999
It is now possible to make clones, or exact genetic copies, of sheep, cows, goats, mice and, probably, humans. This opens the way towards the production of replacement body parts from adult cells.
J B, Gurdon, A, Colman
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Clone Stability

2011 15th European Conference on Software Maintenance and Reengineering, 2011
Code clones are said to threaten the maintainability of a system -- especially when the system evolves and source code is changed. Whether clones truly increase maintenance effort can be analyzed by comparing the stability of cloned code to the stability of non-cloned code.
Nils Göde, Jan Harder
openaire   +1 more source

To clone or not to clone.

New York University journal of legislation and public policy, 2004
E D, Shapiro, J, Long, R, Gideon
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Optimizing quantum cloning circuit parameters based on adaptive guided differential evolution algorithm

Journal of Advanced Research, 2021
Essam H Houssein   +2 more
exaly  

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