Mutually exclusive patterns. “Mutually exclusive” means that two exon/intron structures cannot belong to the same transcript. In this study, a mutually exclusive relationship was called if an intron in one gene structure overlapped an exon of another gene structure. We observed the following basic types of mutually exclusive relationships: exon insertion, exon skipping, splice-site mismatch, intron insertion, intron retention, alternative first exon, alternative last exon, partial exon insertion, partial intron retention, and intronic exon. Complex splice patterns may be composed of multiple basic patterns. Note that some of these relationships are reciprocal. For example, “exon skipping” is the reciprocal of “exon insertion.” The choice of which to use depends on whether the long form or the short form is selected as the reference. For two types of mutually exclusive patterns, the underlying biological processes may not involve alternative splicing at all. Firstly, “intron retention” may be representative of contamination caused by partially spliced or unprocessed pre-mRNAs. Secondly, “intronic exons” may be indicative of intronic genes (genes within genes) rather than alternative splicing.