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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2014
During the past decades, stellar oscillations and exoplanet searches were developed in parallel, and the observations were done with the same instruments: radial velocity method, essentially with ground-based instruments, and photometric methods (light curves) from space. The same observational data on one star could lead to planet discoveries at large time scales (days to years) and to the detection of stellar oscillations at small time scales (minutes), such as for the star μ Arae. Since the beginning, it seemed interesting to investigate the differences between stars with and without observed planets. Also, a precise determination of the stellar parameters is important to characterize the detected exoplanets. With the thousands of exoplanet candidates discovered by Kepler, automatic procedures and pipelines are needed with large data bases to characterize the central stars. However, precise asteroseismic studies of well-chosen stars are still important for a deeper insight.