Talk:Manuel Corpas (scientist)
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Edit Request: Updated Biography & Sources
[edit]Manuelcorpas (talk) 10:36, 14 February 2025 (UTC)
Disclosure: I am Dr. Manuel Corpas, the subject of this article, and therefore have a conflict of interest (COI). Per Wikipedia’s COI guidelines, I am submitting this edit request rather than making the changes directly.
Reason for Request
[edit]- Demonstrated Public Engagement: Independent Spanish‐language media outlets have covered my work in genomics and bioinformatics, citing my contributions in areas such as open science, personal genomics, and population genetics.
- Public Speaking & Conferences: I have presented at numerous conferences and events (in Spain and internationally), often with media coverage. Adding these references can help illustrate the notability and breadth of public engagement.
- Influencer / Thought Leader: My roles in open‐source bioinformatics projects and my active participation in social media discussions (including recognized “top influencer” lists at major genomics events) further showcase third‐party acknowledgment of my influence.
Proposed Addition to Article Text
[edit]I respectfully propose creating or expanding a section—perhaps titled “Media Coverage and Public Engagement”—to include the following:
Media Coverage
Multiple Spanish‐language outlets have reported on Dr. Corpas’s work and public appearances. In 2024, for instance, Onda Cero Radio (Spain) profiled a genomics expedition he co-led in the Amazon, describing it as a “misión científica pionera” investigating genetic diversity in remote indigenous communities.<sup>[O1]</sup>
El Periódico highlighted Dr. Corpas as “pionero en compartir en Internet la base genética de su familia,” noting his open‐science approach to personal genomics.<sup>[E1]</sup> El País, Spain’s major newspaper, has featured him in articles on cutting‐edge genomic medicine and the need for formalized clinical genetics education, citing his academic and industry roles.<sup>[E2]</sup> In these pieces, he provides expert commentary on integrating genomic data into Spanish healthcare.
Additional outlets, including Málaga Hoy, InfoSalus/Europa Press, Tendencias21, and specialized publications like Genotipia, have covered Corpas’s conference talks and personal genomics research, underscoring his role as a leading Spanish expert in bioinformatics.
Public Speaking and Conferences
In October 2024, Dr. Manuel Corpas was featured in an interview by Front Line Genomics, where he discussed his research, career, efforts to increase diversity in genomics data, and his recent expedition to the Amazon. This interview provides insight into his contributions to the field and his role in promoting inclusivity within genomics.[1]
Proposed References
[edit]1. [O1] **Onda Cero Radio** (23 Sep 2024). Coverage of Amazon genetic expedition: La Rosa de los Vientos broadcast. Available at: [1](https://www.ondacero.es/programas/la-rosa-de-los-vientos/audios-podcast/entrevistas/expedicion-cientifica-genetica-amazonas_2024092366f0dd6bfcf7b300013dcae0.html)
2. [E1] **El Periódico** (2025). “El científico español Manuel Corpas, pionero en compartir su base genética familiar.” [Science & Technology section coverage]. Available at: [2](https://www.elperiodico.com/es/tendencias21/20250120/doctor-manuel-corpas-viaje-alucinante-113545428)
3. [E2] **El País** (2021). “La medicina de vanguardia busca a los profesionales del futuro” (featuring commentary by Dr. Corpas on clinical genetics in Spain). Available at: [3](https://elpais.com/sociedad/generacion-futura/2021-05-31/la-medicina-de-vanguardia-busca-a-los-profesionales-del-futuro.html)
4. [M1] **Málaga Hoy** (2017). “Algoritmos para curarse en salud—El bioinformático malagueño Manuel Corpas regresa a la UMA.” Available at: [4](http://www.malagahoy.es/malaga/Algoritmos-curarse-salud_0_1125487785.html)
5. [L1] **Valencia Plaza** (2018). “¿Qué significa la medicina P4 para la longevidad?” Quotes from Dr. Corpas on precision medicine. Available at: [5](https://valenciaplaza.com/valenciaplaza/que-significa-la-medicina-p4-para-la-longevidad)
Request for Review
[edit]I invite other Wikipedia editors to review these references and proposed text to ensure it meets a neutral point of view, adheres to all relevant policies (e.g., WP:V, WP:RS, and WP:NPOV), and appropriately reflects available third‐party coverage. I’m aware that editors may rephrase or reduce details to maintain encyclopedic style.
Thank you for considering these updates to illustrate the independent media coverage and public engagement associated with my work. I welcome any changes necessary to align the content with Wikipedia’s standards. Manuelcorpas (talk) 10:36, 14 February 2025 (UTC)
References
- ^ "Manuel Corpas Interview". Front Line Genomics. October 2024. Retrieved {{subst:DATE}}.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|access-date=
(help)COI Request for Edits – Requesting Review by User:Propicee
[edit]Wikipedia Talk Page Request (to Farzana Rahman - User:Propicee)
[edit]COI Request for Edits – Requesting Review by User:Propicee
[edit]Hello @Propicee: I hope this message finds you well.
I am the subject of this article and, in accordance with Wikipedia’s conflict of interest (COI) policy, I’m not editing the page directly. I previously submitted an edit request here on 14 February 2025 but it seems to have gone unanswered.
I’m now reaching out respectfully to ask if you would be willing to help review and possibly implement an updated version of the article. The draft is structured to follow Wikipedia’s tone and guidelines and includes independent citations from major media and academic sources.
- Key additions include:**
- Updated lead paragraph with citation-supported claims - Expanded sections on career, research, and public engagement - References from El País, Onda Cero, Front Line Genomics, etc. - Formatted with `
{{cite web}}
: Empty citation (help)` where applicableThe full proposed revision is now included below. It has been structured to make it as easy as possible to implement.
With appreciation, Manuelcorpas (talk) – 1 August 2025
FULL PROPOSED WIKIPEDIA ARTICLE UPDATE
[edit]
Manuel Corpas Portrait of Manuel CorpasBorn Manuel Corpas LopezNationality British-Spanish Alma mater University of Navarra
University of ManchesterKnown for Awards
- Fellow, Alan Turing Institute 2024
- Fellow, Higher Education Academy 2023
- Software Sustainability Institute Fellow 2016
Scientific career Fields Bioinformatics
Genomics
Artificial Intelligence
Computational BiologyInstitutions Thesis Folding Patterns in Protein Sequences (2007) Doctoral advisor Terri Attwood Website Manuel Corpas is a leading genomicist and health data scientist, internationally recognized for advancing equity in precision medicine. His work bridges population genomics, pharmacogenomics, and biobanking, with a focus on underserved and underrepresented populations.[1] As President of the Spanish Congress of Genomic Medicine,[2] he has led the largest Spanish-speaking platform for genomic health equity.
He is a driving force behind major sequencing efforts such as the Peruvian Genome Project,[3] pushing the boundaries of human genetic diversity and inclusion in global reference datasets. Corpas has contributed to widely used open-source and clinical bioinformatics tools, including DECIPHER for rare disease diagnosis[4] and BioJS for genomic data visualization.[5]
His leadership spans cross-sectoral impact: from shaping GA4GH diversity and EDI standards,[6] to contributing to landmark projects such as Deciphering Developmental Disorders (13k trios),[7] GOBLET,[8] and ELIXIR-UK.[9] As an elected Fellow of the Alan Turing Institute[10] and the Software Sustainability Institute,[11] he is advancing the role of AI in transforming health data into actionable insight, including pioneering applications of large language models to biobank-scale health data.[12]
Currently Senior Lecturer in Genomics at the University of Westminster,[13] Corpas is author of ~100 peer-reviewed publications[14] and a sought-after keynote speaker. His mission is to harness AI, health data and genomics to create inclusive, globally scalable and equitable health solutions, with special emphasis on Latin America. He was among the first researchers to sequence his own genome and that of his family members, publishing this as the Corpasome.[15]
Education
[edit]Corpas gained his Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Biomedical Sciences from the University of Navarra in 1999, including an Erasmus year at the University of Southampton (1999-2000). He earned his MSc in Bioinformatics from the University of Manchester in 2002. He was awarded a PhD in Bioinformatics in 2007 by the University of Manchester under the supervision of Professor Terri Attwood and Dr Steve Pettifer studying the evolutionary conservation of folds in proteins.[16] He obtained a Postgraduate Certificate in Higher Education from the University of Westminster in 2023, achieving Fellow status of the Higher Education Academy.[17]
Academic service
[edit]During his PhD Corpas started the International Society for Computational Biology Student Council (ISCBSC),[18] the international organisation of computational biology students. The International Society for Computational Biology officially approved the Student Council in 2004 with Corpas as its inaugural Chair. To date the Student Council has numerous Regional Student Groups around the world touching many thousands of students in the field.[19][20] Corpas has also organised the first Student Council Symposium in Computational Biology at the European Conference in Computational Biology in Madrid (2005). Additionally, he served as the chair of the first conference of bioinformatics in Africa by the African Society for Bioinformatics and Computational Biology.
Research and career
[edit]After a few months at the Spanish National Bioinformatics Institute in Madrid under Alfonso Valencia and the European Bioinformatics Institute under Ewan Birney, Corpas settled at the Wellcome Sanger Institute as developer of the DECIPHER database under the supervision of Dr Helen V. Firth.[21] Since then he has been working in the field of human genome research and personal genomics. During his tenure at the Wellcome Sanger Institute he initially focused on the development of integration and visualisation tools for interpretation of Copy Number Variation datasets.[4][22] A while later, he started his work in the 'Corpasome'.[23][24][25] He was among the first people to make public on the internet his personal genotype from 23andMe, terming the process "genome blogging".[26] Soon after his family analysed their genotypes using 23andMe data first and then human exome technology and more recently whole genome.[27] This has led to a number of important publications in the field of personal genomics,[28] performing the first crowdsourced analysis of a family of genomes.[29] During the end of his tenure at the Sanger Institute he organised the BioJavaScript (BioJS) community to become its coordinator since 2012 until 2017. The BioJS community is the greatest effort to date in the provision of open source web components for biological visualisation. Corpas' research group has been involved in some of the most important developments of this open software community.[5][30][31] BioJS involves efforts from world leading resources such as the European Bioinformatics Institute, the Berkeley Lab, Cambridge University and others. Corpas was successful in obtaining 5 internship for the Google Summer of Code, which catapulted BioJS as an international effort.
Corpas has also been the Technical Coordinator of ELIXIR-UK,[32] the UK branch of the ELIXIR European network for bioinformatics and data resources. During his time as ELIXIR Technical coordinator he has been involved in the development of best practices and standardised metrics to measure the impact of data resources across Europe. During this time he also was involved in the Global Organisation for Bioinformatics Learning, Education and Training,[33][34] acting as the chair of their technical committee and the development of their training portal, which provides open access training resources for the bioinformatics community.
As well as his work at Cambridge Precision Medicine, Manuel is a Tutor at the University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education,[35] and also teaches online courses in precision medicine in both English and Spanish.
Current research focus
[edit]Since 2024, as a Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute, Corpas has pioneered the application of artificial intelligence and large language models to address systemic biases in biomedical research. His work focuses on the critical challenge of underrepresentation of non-European populations in genomic databases and AI models that underpin modern precision medicine.[12]
His research program encompasses several interconnected areas:
AI and biobank-scale genomics
[edit]Corpas's 2025 study benchmarked leading LLMs (GPT, Claude, Gemini, Llama, Mistral) for mining UK Biobank-derived insights,[12] demonstrating how AI can accelerate discovery from large-scale health datasets while revealing how these models fail to generalise due to biased input data. At the Alan Turing Institute, he has applied LLMs to biobank metadata and Spanish hospital data, exposing critical gaps in AI model performance for diverse populations.[36]
Population genomics and diversity
[edit]Corpas co-leads the Peruvian Genome Project, which has performed DNA sequencing on Indigenous Andean and Amazonian individuals, generating novel population reference genomes.[3] This work demonstrates the feasibility of LMIC-led genomics and the value of participatory research models. He has led high-impact studies evaluating data biases in global databases including PharmGKB, UK Biobank, and FDA pharmacogenomics guidance,[37] contributing diversity metrics now used by GA4GH.[38]
His research on underrepresented populations extends to Africa, with studies on polygenic risk scores in sub-Saharan African populations[39] and pharmacogenomic variant mapping in Ugandan populations.[40]
Infrastructure and policy development
[edit]Beyond scientific discovery, Corpas's research underpins broader ethical and infrastructural shifts in genomics. He has developed new methods for community engagement, ethical data governance, and diversity benchmarking that have been adopted by major international organisations.[1] His frameworks have influenced policy at GA4GH, with his diversity auditing metrics becoming international reference materials.
As President of the Spanish Congress on Genome Medicine (2024-2025), he has created the largest Spanish-speaking platform for genomic health equity, with participation from 21 countries.[41] Through conference leadership, academic publishing, and development of the MSc programme in AI and Digital Health at Westminster, Corpas has built a global ecosystem of researchers and institutions committed to inclusive genomic science.
COVID-19 genomics
[edit]During the COVID-19 pandemic, Corpas led genomic studies identifying genetic signatures in T cell receptors from severe COVID-19 patients[42] and conducting whole genome sequencing of patient cohorts from the first wave of infection.[43]
Manuel has ~100 peer reviewed scientific publications to his name,[44] and a book Perfect DNA,[45] in which he explores the wider issues beyond the science of genetic sequencing.
Leadership and service
[edit]Editorial roles
[edit]
- Editor, PLOS Digital Health (2025-present)[46]
- Board Member and Associate Editor, Frontiers in Genetics (2021-present)
- Guest Editor for special issues on genomic diversity and polygenic risk scores in BMC Medical Genomics (2023)
Conference organization
[edit]
- President, Second Spanish Congress in Genomic Medicine (2025)
- President, First Spanish Congress in Genomic Medicine (2024)[47]
- Organiser, Cambridge Genomics Meetup series (2019-present)
- Organiser, London Bioinformatics Meetup series (2023-present)
- Chair, ISCB Africa ASBCB Conference on Bioinformatics, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania (2015)
Professional committees
[edit]
- Member, UKRI Talent Peer Review College (2025-present)
- Panellist, UKRI Japan-UK joint call for human-centred AI, Tokyo (2025)
- Member, Clinical AI Interest Group, Alan Turing Institute (2024-present)
- Member, Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Committee (2020-present)
- Board of Directors, International Society for Computational Biology (2014)
Awards and honours
[edit]Corpas is a fellow of the Software Sustainability Institute,[48] Fellow of the Alan Turing Institute (2024),[49] and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (2023). He is a frequent speaker in world renown events in genomics such as Festival of Genomics London, BioData West, the Longevity World Forum and others. He has been catalogued as one of the leading people from Málaga (Spain) having an impact in the world.[50]
Selected publications
[edit]Key recent publications include:
- Corpas M; Guio H; Lopez-Correa C; Fatumo S (July 29, 2025). "Why genomic diversity should not be framed by census alone". Nature Genetics. doi:10.1038/s41588-025-02272-5. PMID 40731071.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link)- Blasco-Fontecilla H; et al. (2025). "Sex-specific diagnostic subtypes in adolescents with substance use disorder using transformer-based clustering". Journal of Attention Disorders. 29 (6): 411–422. doi:10.1177/10870547241229875.
- Corpas M; et al. (2024). "Addressing Ancestry and Sex Bias in Pharmacogenomics". Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology. 64. doi:10.1146/annurev-pharmtox-030223-123625.
- Samarasinghe SR; Lee SB; Corpas M; et al. (2024). "Mapping the Pharmacogenetic Landscape in a Ugandan Population: Implications for Personalized Medicine in an Underrepresented Population". Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics. doi:10.1002/cpt.3309.
- Kamiza AB; et al. (2023). "Multi-trait discovery and fine-mapping of lipid loci in 125,000 individuals of African ancestry". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 5403. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-40961-z.
- Fatumo S; et al. (2022). "Polygenic prediction of lipid traits in sub-Saharan Africans". Nature Medicine. 28 (6): 1163–1166. doi:10.1038/s41591-022-01699-1.
External Links
[edit]References
[edit]
- ^ a b Corpas, M; Pius, M; Poburennaya, M; et al. (2025). "Bridging genomics' greatest challenge: The diversity gap". Cell Genomics. 5 (1): 100724. doi:10.1016/j.xgen.2024.100724.
- ^ Corpas M; Soriano V; Perucho T; et al. (2024). "Playing catching up: Proceedings of the 1st Spanish conference on genomic medicine". AIDS Reviews. doi:10.24875/AIDSRev.M24000074.
- ^ a b Guio H; Sanchez C; Borda V; et al. (2025). "The Peruvian Genome Project: expanding the global pool of genome diversity from South America". Frontiers in Genetics. 16: 1614021. doi:10.3389/fgene.2025.1614021.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)- ^ a b Firth HV, Richards SM, Bevan AP, Clayton S, Corpas M, et al. (April 2009). "DECIPHER: Database of Chromosomal Imbalance and Phenotype in Humans Using Ensembl Resources". Am. J. Hum. Genet. 84 (4): 524–33. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.03.010. PMC 2667985. PMID 19344873.
- ^ a b Corpas; Jimenez, Rafael; Carbon, Seth J; García, Alex; Garcia, Leyla; Goldberg, Tatyana; Gomez, John; Kalderimis, Alexis; Lewis, Suzanna E; Mulvany, Ian; Pawlik, Aleksandra; Rowland, Francis; Salazar, Gustavo; Schreiber, Fabian; Sillitoe, Ian; Spooner, William H; Thanki, Anil; Villaveces, José M; Yachdav, Guy; Hermjakob, Henning (2014). "BioJS: an open source standard for biological visualisation – its status in 2014". F1000Research. 3: 55. doi:10.12688/f1000research.3-55.v1. ISSN 2046-1402. PMC 4103492. PMID 25075290.
- ^ Skantharajah N; et al. (2023). "Equity, Diversity and Inclusion at the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health". Cell Genomics. 3 (8): 100386. doi:10.1016/j.xgen.2023.100386.
- ^ Wright CF; et al. (2023). "Genomic Diagnosis of Rare Pediatric Disease in the United Kingdom and Ireland". New England Journal of Medicine. 388 (17): 1559–1571. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2209046.
- ^ Corpas, M.; Jimenez, R. C.; Bongcam-Rudloff, E.; Budd, A.; Brazas, M. D.; Fernandes, P. L.; van Gelder, C.; Korpelainen, E.; Lewitter, F.; McGrath, A.; MacLean, D.; Palagi, P.; Rother, K.; Taylor, J.; Via, A.; Watson, M.; Schneider, M. V.; Attwood, T. K. (2015). "The GOBLET training portal: a global repository of bioinformatics training materials, courses and trainers". Bioinformatics. 31 (1): 140–142. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btu601. PMC 4271145. PMID 25189782.
- ^ "ELIXIR-UK – UK life science infrastructure for biological information". Retrieved 2019-09-04.
- ^ "Manuel Corpas - The Alan Turing Institute". Retrieved 2025-08-01.
- ^ "Fellow Software Sustainability Institute". software.ac.uk. 2016. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
- ^ a b c Corpas, Manuel; Iacoangeli, Alfredo (2025). "Large Language Models for Mining Biobank-Derived Insights into Health and Disease". doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-6098960/v1.
{{cite journal}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help); Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)- ^ "Dr Manuel Corpas - University of Westminster". Retrieved 2025-08-01.
- ^ "Manuel Corpas - Google Scholar Citations". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 2019-09-04.
- ^ Corpas, Manuel (2013). "Corpasome". figshare. doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.693052.v3. Retrieved 2019-09-04.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)- ^ Corpas, Manuel (2007). Folding patterns in protein sequences (PhD thesis). University of Manchester. doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.964811.v1.
- ^ "Fellowship - Advance HE". Retrieved 2025-08-01.
- ^ Corpas, Manuel (August 2005). "Scientists & societies". Nature. 436 (7054): 1204. doi:10.1038/nj7054-1204b. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 16144051. S2CID 186242202.
- ^ "ISCB-SC RSGs". Retrieved 1 February 2017.
- ^ Macintyre, Geoff (2013). "The Regional Student Group Program of the ISCB Student Council: Stories from the Road". PLOS Computational Biology. 9 (9): e1003241. Bibcode:2013PLSCB...9E3241M. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003241. PMC 3784494. PMID 24098107.
- ^ www-core (webteam). "Helen V Firth". www.sanger.ac.uk. Retrieved 2019-09-04.
- ^ Swaminathan GJ; Bragin E; Chatzimichali EA; Corpas M; et al. (2012). "DECIPHER: web-based community resource for clinical interpretation of rare variants in developmental disorders". Hum. Mol. Genet. 21 (R1): R37 – R44. doi:10.1093/hmg/dds362. PMC 3459644. PMID 22962312.
- ^ Corpas M, Cariaso M, Coletta A, Weiss D, Harrison AP, Moran F, Yang H (12 November 2013). "A Complete Public Domain Family Genomics Dataset". bioRxiv 10.1101/000216.
- ^ Corpas, Manuel (2013). "Crowdsourcing the Corpasome". Source Code for Biology and Medicine. 8 (1): 13. doi:10.1186/1751-0473-8-13. PMC 3706263. PMID 23799911.
- ^ Corpas M, Valdivia-Granda W, Torres N, Greshake B, Coletta A, Knaus A, Harrison AP, Cariaso M, Moran F, Nielsen F, Swan D, Weiss Solis DY, Krawitz P, Schacherer F, Schols P, Yang H, Borry P, Glusman G, Robinson PN (Nov 2015). "Crowdsourced direct-to-consumer genomic analysis of a family quartet". BMC Genomics. 16 (910): 910. doi:10.1186/s12864-015-1973-7. PMC 4636840. PMID 26547235.
- ^ Corpas, Manuel (2012). "A genome blogger manifesto". GigaScience. 1 (1): 15. doi:10.1186/2047-217X-1-15. PMC 3626510. PMID 23587446.
- ^ "Corpasome at BMC". blogs.biomedcentral.com. 28 June 2013. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
- ^ Corpas M (June 2012). "A Family Experience of Personal Genomics". Journal of Genetic Counseling. 21 (3): 386–391. doi:10.1007/s10897-011-9473-7. PMC 134180. PMID 22223063.
- ^ "Keeping It in the family". www.sciencemag.org. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
- ^ Thanki, Anil S.; Caim, Shabhonam; Corpas, Manuel; Davey, Robert P. (2014). "DNAContentViewer a BioJS component to visualise GC/AT Content". F1000Research. 3: 54. doi:10.12688/f1000research.3-54.v1. ISSN 2046-1402.
- ^ Thanki, Anil S.; Jimenez, Rafael C.; Kaithakottil, Gemy G.; Corpas, Manuel; Davey, Robert P. (2014). "wigExplorer, a BioJS component to visualise wig data". F1000Research. 3: 53. doi:10.12688/f1000research.3-53.v2. ISSN 2046-1402. PMC 5054804. PMID 27781080.
- ^ "ELIXIR-UK – UK life science infrastructure for biological information". Retrieved 2019-09-04.
- ^ "Committees | GOBLET". www.mygoblet.org. 16 November 2014. Retrieved 24 August 2016.
- ^ Corpas, M.; Jimenez, R. C.; Bongcam-Rudloff, E.; Budd, A.; Brazas, M. D.; Fernandes, P. L.; van Gelder, C.; Korpelainen, E.; Lewitter, F.; McGrath, A.; MacLean, D.; Palagi, P.; Rother, K.; Taylor, J.; Via, A.; Watson, M.; Schneider, M. V.; Attwood, T. K. (2015). "The GOBLET training portal: a global repository of bioinformatics training materials, courses and trainers". Bioinformatics. 31 (1): 140–142. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btu601. PMC 4271145. PMID 25189782.
- ^ "Manuel Corpas - Institute of Continuing Education (ICE)". ice.cam.ac.uk. 12 July 2018. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
- ^ Blasco-Fontecilla H; et al. (2025). "Sex-specific diagnostic subtypes in adolescents with substance use disorder using transformer-based clustering". Journal of Attention Disorders. 29 (6): 411–422. doi:10.1177/10870547241229875.
- ^ Corpas M; et al. (2024). "Addressing Ancestry and Sex Bias in Pharmacogenomics". Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology. 64. doi:10.1146/annurev-pharmtox-030223-123625.
- ^ Skantharajah N; et al. (2023). "Equity, Diversity and Inclusion at the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health". Cell Genomics. 3 (8): 100386. doi:10.1016/j.xgen.2023.100386.
- ^ Fatumo S; Kamiza A; Toure S; et al. (2022). "Polygenic prediction of lipid traits in sub-Saharan Africans". Nature Medicine. 28 (6): 1163–1166. doi:10.1038/s41591-022-01699-1.
- ^ Samarasinghe SR; Lee SB; Corpas M; et al. (2024). "Mapping the Pharmacogenetic Landscape in a Ugandan Population: Implications for Personalized Medicine in an Underrepresented Population". Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics. doi:10.1002/cpt.3309.
- ^ Corpas M; Soriano V; Perucho T; et al. (2024). "Playing catching up: Proceedings of the 1st Spanish conference on genomic medicine". AIDS Reviews. doi:10.24875/AIDSRev.M24000074.
- ^ Corpas M; de Mendoza C; Moreno-Torres V; et al. (2023). "Genetic signature detected in T cell receptors from patients with severe COVID-19". iScience. 26 (9): 107735. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2023.107735.
- ^ Santos R; Moreno-Torres V; Pintos I; et al. (2024). "Low-coverage whole genome sequencing for a highly selective cohort of severe COVID-19 patients". GigaByte. doi:10.46471/gigabyte.127.
- ^ "Manuel Corpas - Google Scholar Citations". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 2019-09-04.
- ^ Manuel Corpas (2016). Perfect DNA. Cambridge: DNAdigest. ISBN 978-1539783725.
- ^ "Editorial Board - PLOS Digital Health". Retrieved 2025-08-01.
- ^ Corpas M; Soriano V; Perucho T; et al. (2024). "Playing catching up: Proceedings of the 1st Spanish conference on genomic medicine". AIDS Reviews. doi:10.24875/AIDSRev.M24000074.
- ^ "Fellow Software Sustainability Institute". software.ac.uk. 2016. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
- ^ "Turing announces new Fellows for 2024". The Alan Turing Institute. 2024-03-15. Retrieved 2025-08-01.
- ^ Hoy, Málaga (2016-04-10). "Los números 1 malagueños". Málaga Hoy (in Spanish). Retrieved 2019-09-04.
Manuelcorpas (talk) 13:47, 1 August 2025 (UTC)
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