Content Providers
-
IFB French Institute of Bioinformatics
The French Institute of Bioinformatics (CNRS IFB) is a national service infrastructure in bioinformatics. IFB’s principal mission is to provide basic services and resources in bioinformatics for scientists and engineers working in the life sciences. IFB is the French node of the European research...
144 training materials15 events (457 past events)IFB French Institute of Bioinformatics http://www.france-bioinformatique.fr https://tess.elixir-europe.org/content_providers/ifb-french-institute-of-bioinformatics The French Institute of Bioinformatics (CNRS IFB) is a national service infrastructure in bioinformatics. IFB’s principal mission is to provide basic services and resources in bioinformatics for scientists and engineers working in the life sciences. IFB is the French node of the European research infrastructure, ELIXIR. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/049/original/logo-ifb-couleur.svg?1663599376 -
NanoCommons
NanoCommons will deliver a sustainable and openly accessible nanoinformatics framework (knowledgebase and integrated computational tools, supported by expert advice, data interpretation and training), for assessment of the risks of NMs, their products and their formulations. NanoCommons combines...
9 training materials0 events (21 past events)NanoCommons https://www.nanocommons.eu/ https://tess.elixir-europe.org/content_providers/nanocommons NanoCommons will deliver a sustainable and openly accessible nanoinformatics framework (knowledgebase and integrated computational tools, supported by expert advice, data interpretation and training), for assessment of the risks of NMs, their products and their formulations. NanoCommons combines Joint Research Activities to implement the nanoinformatics Knowledge Commons, Networking Activities to facilitate engagement with the research community, industry and regulators, and provision of funded Access to the nanoinformatics tools via funded calls for Transnational Access. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/099/original/NanoCommons-Logo-Sphere-Trans-White-circle-512px.png?1650899421 -
eNanoMapper
eNanoMapper developed a computational infrastructure for toxicological data management of engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) based on open standards, ontologies and an interoperable design to enable a more effective, integrated approach to European research in nanotechnology. eNanoMapper supports...
10 training materialseNanoMapper http://enanomapper.net/ https://tess.elixir-europe.org/content_providers/enanomapper eNanoMapper developed a computational infrastructure for toxicological data management of engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) based on open standards, ontologies and an interoperable design to enable a more effective, integrated approach to European research in nanotechnology. eNanoMapper supports the collaborative safety assessment for ENMs by creating a modular, extensible infrastructure for transparent data sharing, data analysis, and the creation of computational toxicology models for ENMs. eNanoMapper was funded by the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 604134. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/092/original/logo.png?1528313779 -
University of Leicester Bioinformatics and Biostatistics Analysis Support Hub (BBASH)
The ongoing development of next generation sequencing (NGS) technologies has meant that vast amounts of sequencing data is being produced, with researchers increasingly wanting the capability and knowledge to analyse their own data. Over the past 3 years BBASH has developed a number of 1, 2 and...
0 events (2 past events)University of Leicester Bioinformatics and Biostatistics Analysis Support Hub (BBASH) https://www2.le.ac.uk/colleges/medbiopsych/facilities-and-services/cbs/bbash https://tess.elixir-europe.org/content_providers/university-of-leicester-bioinformatics-and-biostatistics-analysis-support-hub-bbash The ongoing development of next generation sequencing (NGS) technologies has meant that vast amounts of sequencing data is being produced, with researchers increasingly wanting the capability and knowledge to analyse their own data. Over the past 3 years BBASH has developed a number of 1, 2 and 3 day hands-on, NGS analysis workshops designed specificially to meet the needs of laboratory based researchers with little or no experience of NGS data analysis and command line tools. The workshops are held at the University of Leicester's state of the art College Court Conference Centre and consist of introductory presentations followed by practical sessions where delegates will gain hands-on experience of analysing and interpreting real data. The BBASH trainers are University of Leicester bioinformaticians or researchers with many years experience in bioinformatics and bioinformatics training, having delivered many workshops across the UK and Europe. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/086/original/BBASHlogo.png?1509536575