A Web-based infrastructure for the management of semantic meta-data

Author(s):  
V. Del Bianco ◽  
G. Ripa ◽  
E. Tracanella ◽  
L. Lavazza
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
David DeTomaso ◽  
Matthew G. Jones ◽  
Meena Subramaniam ◽  
Tal Ashuach ◽  
Chun J. Ye ◽  
...  

Abstract We present Vision, a tool for annotating the sources of variation in single cell RNA-seq data in an automated and scalable manner. Vision operates directly on the manifold of cell-cell similarity and employs a flexible annotation approach that can operate either with or without preconceived stratification of the cells into groups or along a continuum. We demonstrate the utility of Vision in several case studies and show that it can derive important sources of cellular variation and link them to experimental meta-data even with relatively homogeneous sets of cells. Vision produces an interactive, low latency and feature rich web-based report that can be easily shared among researchers, thus facilitating data dissemination and collaboration.


Author(s):  
Martin Scharm ◽  
Florian Wendland ◽  
Martin Peters ◽  
Markus Wolfien ◽  
Tom Theile ◽  
...  

Sharing in silico experiments is essential for the advance of research in computational biology. Consequently, the COMBINE archive was designed as a digital container format. It eases the management of files related to a modelling result, fosters collaboration, and ultimately enables the exchange of reproducible simulation studies. However, manual handling of COMBINE archives is tedious and error prone. We therefore developed the CombineArchiveWeb application to support scientists in promoting and publishing their research by means of creating, exploring, modifying, and sharing archives. All files are equipped with meta data and can be distributed over the Web through shareable workspaces.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Beißwenger ◽  
Wolfgang Imo ◽  
Marcel Fladrich ◽  
Evelyn Ziegler

AbstractThis paper reports on findings from the MoCoDa2 project which is creating a corpus of private CMC interactions from smartphone apps based on donations by their users. Different from other projects in the field, the project involves users not only as donators but also as editors of their data: In a web-based editing environment which provides users with access to their raw data, they are supported in pseudonymising their data and enhancing them with rich metadata on the interactional context, meta-data on the interlocutors and their relations, and on embedded media files. The resulting corpus will be a useful resource not only for quantitative but also for qualitative CMC research. For representation and annotation of the data the project builds on best practices from previous projects in the field and cooperates with a language technology partner.


Author(s):  
Ashley M. Clark ◽  
Sarah Connell

This article offers a case study in the creation and metamorphosis of a corpus of transcriptions intended for web publication. It discusses a process for encoding, proofing, and publishing a collection of brief periodical documents (largely reviews) on the subject of authors published in the Women Writers Project’s established Women Writers Online corpus, as part of an initiative investigating the transatlantic reception of early women’s texts. Both encoding and publication in the initiative, Cultures of Reception, were driven by the particular characteristics of this collection and the importance of establishing links to the existing materials in Women Writers Online. This article discusses steps that the Cultures of Reception team took to prepare the encoded texts for publication—including development of a web-based tool systematizing human intervention—and then explains the goals and design of Women Writers in Review, the interface that is used to publish these texts.


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (W1) ◽  
pp. W572-W579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sunil Nagpal ◽  
Rashmi Singh ◽  
Deepak Yadav ◽  
Sharmila S Mande

Abstract Microbial association networks are frequently used for understanding and comparing community dynamics from microbiome datasets. Inferring microbial correlations for such networks and obtaining meaningful biological insights, however, requires a lengthy data management workflow, choice of appropriate methods, statistical computations, followed by a different pipeline for suitably visualizing, reporting and comparing the associations. The complexity is further increased with the added dimension of multi-group ‘meta-data’ and ‘inter-omic’ functional profiles that are often associated with microbiome studies. This not only necessitates the need for categorical networks, but also integrated and bi-partite networks. Multiple options of network inference algorithms further add to the efforts required for performing correlation-based microbiome interaction studies. We present MetagenoNets, a web-based application, which accepts multi-environment microbial abundance as well as functional profiles, intelligently segregates ‘continuous and categorical’ meta-data and allows inference as well as visualization of categorical, integrated (inter-omic) and bi-partite networks. Modular structure of MetagenoNets ensures logical flow of analysis (inference, integration, exploration and comparison) in an intuitive and interactive personalized dashboard driven framework. Dynamic choice of filtration, normalization, data transformation and correlation algorithms ensures, that end-users get a one-stop solution for microbial network analysis. MetagenoNets is freely available at https://web.rniapps.net/metagenonets.


Author(s):  
Martin Scharm ◽  
Florian Wendland ◽  
Martin Peters ◽  
Markus Wolfien ◽  
Tom Theile ◽  
...  

Sharing in silico experiments is essential for the advance of research in computational biology. Consequently, the COMBINE archive was designed as a digital container format. It eases the management of files related to a modelling result, fosters collaboration, and ultimately enables the exchange of reproducible simulation studies. However, manual handling of COMBINE archives is tedious and error prone. We therefore developed the CombineArchiveWeb application to support scientists in promoting and publishing their research by means of creating, exploring, modifying, and sharing archives. All files are equipped with meta data and can be distributed over the Web through shareable workspaces.


1998 ◽  
Vol 62 (9) ◽  
pp. 671-674
Author(s):  
JF Chaves ◽  
JA Chaves ◽  
MS Lantz
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 82-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva van Leer

Mobile tools are increasingly available to help individuals monitor their progress toward health behavior goals. Commonly known commercial products for health and fitness self-monitoring include wearable devices such as the Fitbit© and Nike + Pedometer© that work independently or in conjunction with mobile platforms (e.g., smartphones, media players) as well as web-based interfaces. These tools track and graph exercise behavior, provide motivational messages, offer health-related information, and allow users to share their accomplishments via social media. Approximately 2 million software programs or “apps” have been designed for mobile platforms (Pure Oxygen Mobile, 2013), many of which are health-related. The development of mobile health devices and applications is advancing so quickly that the Food and Drug Administration issued a Guidance statement with the purpose of defining mobile medical applications and describing a tailored approach to their regulation.


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