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1.
Bioinformatics ; 26(18): i568-74, 2010 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20823323

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: In recent years, the gulf between the mass of accumulating-research data and the massive literature describing and analyzing those data has widened. The need for intelligent tools to bridge this gap, to rescue the knowledge being systematically isolated in literature and data silos, is now widely acknowledged. RESULTS: To this end, we have developed Utopia Documents, a novel PDF reader that semantically integrates visualization and data-analysis tools with published research articles. In a successful pilot with editors of the Biochemical Journal (BJ), the system has been used to transform static document features into objects that can be linked, annotated, visualized and analyzed interactively (http://www.biochemj.org/bj/424/3/). Utopia Documents is now used routinely by BJ editors to mark up article content prior to publication. Recent additions include integration of various text-mining and biodatabase plugins, demonstrating the system's ability to seamlessly integrate on-line content with PDF articles. AVAILABILITY: http://getutopia.com.


Subject(s)
Information Services , Literature , Publications , Research , Software , Internet , Periodicals as Topic , Publications/classification , Publishing
2.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 38(Web Server issue): W719-23, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20501602

ABSTRACT

The WHAT IF molecular-modelling and drug design program is widely distributed in the world of protein structure bioinformatics. Although originally designed as an interactive application, its highly modular design and inbuilt control language have recently enabled its deployment as a collection of programmatically accessible web services. We report here a collection of WHAT IF-based protein structure bioinformatics web services: these relate to structure quality, the use of symmetry in crystal structures, structure correction and optimization, adding hydrogens and optimizing hydrogen bonds and a series of geometric calculations. The freely accessible web services are based on the industry standard WS-I profile and the EMBRACE technical guidelines, and are available via both REST and SOAP paradigms. The web services run on a dedicated computational cluster; their function and availability is monitored daily.


Subject(s)
Protein Conformation , Software , Computational Biology , Computer Graphics , Internet , Models, Molecular
3.
Bioinformatics ; 25(16): 2090-1, 2009 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19460889

ABSTRACT

SUMMARY: The EMBRACE Registry is a web portal that collects and monitors web services according to test scripts provided by the their administrators. Users are able to search for, rank and annotate services, enabling them to select the most appropriate working service for inclusion in their bioinformatics analysis tasks. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Web site implemented with PHP, Python, MySQL and Apache, with all major browsers supported. (www.embraceregistry.net).


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Internet , Software , Databases, Factual , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/methods , User-Computer Interface
4.
Comp Funct Genomics ; 5(1): 56-60, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18629035

ABSTRACT

Bioinformaticians routinely analyse vast amounts of information held both in large remote databases and in flat data files hosted on local machines. The contemporary toolkit available for this purpose consists of an ad hoc collection of data manipulation tools, scripting languages and visualization systems; these must often be combined in complex and bespoke ways, the result frequently being an unwieldy artefact capable of one specific task, which cannot easily be exploited or extended by other practitioners. Owing to the sizes of current databases and the scale of the analyses necessary, routine bioinformatics tasks are often automated, but many still require the unique experience and intuition of human researchers: this requires tools that support real-time interaction with complex datasets. Many existing tools have poor user interfaces and limited real-time performance when applied to realistically large datasets; much of the user's cognitive capacity is therefore focused on controlling the tool rather than on performing the research. The UTOPIA project is addressing some of these issues by building reusable software components that can be combined to make useful applications in the field of bioinformatics. Expertise in the fields of human computer interaction, high-performance rendering, and distributed systems is being guided by bioinformaticians and end-user biologists to create a toolkit that is both architecturally sound from a computing point of view, and directly addresses end-user and application-developer requirements.

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