Arlin Stoltzfus received his Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Iowa in molecular population genetics. He then converted to computational biology during a post-doctoral fellowship with W. Ford Doolittle. He joined NIST in 1999 as a Research Biologist working at the NIST-UMD joint research center IBBR (formerly CARB). In 2016 he became a data scientist with the MML Office of Data and Informatics. He divides his time between ODI service and computer-based research.
Sample Publications
Yu, G., and A. Stoltzfus. 2012. “Population diversity of ORFan genes in Escherichia coli.”. Genome Biol Evol 4(11):1176-87.
Rutger A. Vos, James P. Balhoff, Jason A. Caravas, Mark T. Holder, Hilmar Lapp, Wayne P. Maddison, Peter E. Midford, Anurag Priyam, Jeet Sukumaran, Xuhua Xia, Arlin Stoltzfus; NeXML: Rich, Extensible, and Verifiable Representation of Comparative Data and Metadata. Syst Biol 2012; 61 (4): 675-689.
Prosdocimi, F., B. Chisham, E. Pontelli, J. D. Thompson, and A. Stoltzfus. 2009. “Initial implementation of a comparative data analysis ontology.”. Evol Bioinform Online 5:47-66.
Stoltzfus, A., and L. Y. Yampolsky. 2009. “Climbing mount probable: mutation as a cause of nonrandomness in evolution.”. J Hered 100(5):637-47.
T. Hladish, V. Gopalan, C. L. Liang, W. G. Qiu, P. J. Yang, and A. Stoltzfus. 2007. Bio::NEXUS: a Perl API for the NEXUS format for comparative biological data. BMC Bioinformatics 8:191.
V. Gopalan, W.G. Qiu, M.Z. Chen and A. Stoltzfus. 2006. Nexplorer: Phylogenetic browsing and manipulation of sequence family data. Bioinformatics 22(1):120-1.
L.Y. Yampolsky and A. Stoltzfus. 2005. The Exchangeability of Amino Acids in Proteins. Genetics 170, 1459-1472.
L. Y. Yampolsky and A. Stoltzfus. 2001. Bias in the introduction of variation as an orienting factor in evolution, Evol Dev, 3, 73-83.
A. Stoltzfus. 1999. On the possibility of constructive neutral evolution. J. Mol. Evol. 49(2):169-181.
A. Stoltzfus, D.F. Spencer, M. Zuker, J.M. Logsdon, Jr.,and W.F. Doolittle. 1994. Testing the exon theory of genes: the evidence from protein structure. Science 265:202-7.
NIST-NRC Postdoctoral Fellowship:
2-year fellowship in computational studies of molecular evolution at NIST (US citizens only). $63,400 salary plus benefits, relocation expenses included. Application deadlines Feb. 1 and Aug. 1. Contact Arlin Stoltzfus if interested in writing proposal (3000 words).