mapability
Mapability, often spelled mappability, refers to the ability to uniquely assign a sequencing read to a location in a reference genome. It is influenced by the underlying sequence repetitiveness, the chosen read length, and the error profile of the sequencing technology. In practice, mapability is represented as a per-base score or as a regional metric indicating how reliably reads from that region can be mapped.
Mapability is typically estimated by examining all possible reads of a given length from the genome and
Applications of mapability include informing variant calling and copy-number analysis, interpreting read-depth signals, guiding the design
Limitations arise from dependence on the reference genome version, alignment algorithms and parameters, and the error