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1.
Brief Bioinform ; 21(5): 1697-1705, 2020 09 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31624831

ABSTRACT

The corpus of bioinformatics resources is huge and expanding rapidly, presenting life scientists with a growing challenge in selecting tools that fit the desired purpose. To address this, the European Infrastructure for Biological Information is supporting a systematic approach towards a comprehensive registry of tools and databases for all domains of bioinformatics, provided under a single portal (https://bio.tools). We describe here the practical means by which scientific communities, including individual developers and projects, through major service providers and research infrastructures, can describe their own bioinformatics resources and share these via bio.tools.


Subject(s)
Community Participation , Computational Biology/methods , Software , Computational Biology/standards , Database Management Systems , Europe , Humans
2.
J Proteome Res ; 18(10): 3580-3585, 2019 10 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31429284

ABSTRACT

Proteomics is a highly dynamic field driven by frequent introduction of new technological approaches, leading to high demand for new software tools and the concurrent development of many methods for data analysis, processing, and storage. The rapidly changing landscape of proteomics software makes finding a tool fit for a particular purpose a significant challenge. The comparison of software and the selection of tools capable to perform a certain operation on a given type of data rely on their detailed annotation using well-defined descriptors. However, finding accurate information including tool input/output capabilities can be challenging and often heavily depends on manual curation efforts. This is further hampered by a rather low half-life of most of the tools, thus demanding the maintenance of a resource with updated information about the tools. We present here our approach to curate a collection of 189 software tools with detailed information about their functional capabilities. We furthermore describe our efforts to reach out to the proteomics community for their engagement, which further increased the catalog to >750 tools being about 70% of the estimated number of 1097 tools existing for proteomics data analysis. Descriptions of all annotated tools are available at  https://proteomics.bio.tools.


Subject(s)
Proteomics/methods , Software , Computational Biology , Data Curation , Internet
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