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Found 27 result(s)
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A collection of high quality multiple sequence alignments for objective, comparative studies of alignment algorithms. The alignments are constructed based on 3D structure superposition and manually refined to ensure alignment of important functional residues. A number of subsets are defined covering many of the most important problems encountered when aligning real sets of proteins. It is specifically designed to serve as an evaluation resource to address all the problems encountered when aligning complete sequences. The first release provided sets of reference alignments dealing with the problems of high variability, unequal repartition and large N/C-terminal extensions and internal insertions. Version 2.0 of the database incorporates three new reference sets of alignments containing structural repeats, trans-membrane sequences and circular permutations to evaluate the accuracy of detection/prediction and alignment of these complex sequences. Within the resource, users can look at a list of all the alignments, download the whole database by ftp, get the "c" program to compare a test alignment with the BAliBASE reference (The source code for the program is freely available), or look at the results of a comparison study of several multiple alignment programs, using BAliBASE reference sets.
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Open At LaTrobe (OPAL) is La Trobe University’s official repository for Open Access materials generated by academic and professional staff and HDR students. These include publications and other research outputs, theses, open data, and educational resources. OPAL enables the storage, sharing, and selective publication of files and the assignment of a persistent DOI. Users maintain control over who can see their private files and all uploads are stored in La Trobe University approved storage. Access is via La Trobe University login credentials. La Trobe produces a wide range of useful datasets including supplementary data associated with publications and stand-alone datasets and collections.
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FDAT is a research data repository hosted by the University of Tübingen, designed to facilitate long-term archiving and publication of research data. Managed by the Information, Communication and Media Center (IKM), it primarily caters to the humanities and social sciences, while welcoming researchers from all scientific disciplines at the university. Committed to high-quality data management, FDAT emphasizes the importance of adhering to the FAIR Data Principles, promoting findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability of the research data it contains.
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Figshare has been chosen as the University of Adelaide's official data and digital object repository with unlimited local storage. All current staff and HDR students can access and publish research data and digital objects on the University of Adelaide's Figshare site. Because Figshare is cloud-based, you can access it anywhere and at any time.
The WashU Research Data repository accepts any publishable research data set, including textual, tabular, geospatial, imagery, computer code, or 3D data files, from researchers affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis. Datasets include metadata and are curated and assigned a DOI to align with FAIR data principles.
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Rodare is the institutional research data repository at HZDR (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf). Rodare allows HZDR researchers to upload their research software and data and enrich those with metadata to make them findable, accessible, interoperable and retrievable (FAIR). By publishing all associated research software and data via Rodare research reproducibility can be improved. Uploads receive a Digital Object Identfier (DOI) and can be harvested via a OAI-PMH interface.
Reference anatomies of the brain and corresponding atlases play a central role in experimental neuroimaging workflows and are the foundation for reporting standardized results. The choice of such references —i.e., templates— and atlases is one relevant source of methodological variability across studies, which has recently been brought to attention as an important challenge to reproducibility in neuroscience. TemplateFlow is a publicly available framework for human and nonhuman brain models. The framework combines an open database with software for access, management, and vetting, allowing scientists to distribute their resources under FAIR —findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable— principles. TemplateFlow supports a multifaceted insight into brains across species, and enables multiverse analyses testing whether results generalize across standard references, scales, and in the long term, species, thereby contributing to increasing the reliability of neuroimaging results.
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MIDAS is a national research data repository. The aim of MIDAS is to collect, process, store and analyse research data and other relevant information in all fields of knowledge, enabling free, easy and convenient access to the data via the Internet. MIDAS provides services for registered and unregistered users: students, listeners, academics, researchers, scientists, research administrators, other actors of the research and studies ecosystem, and all individuals interested in research data. MIDAS consists of the MIDAS portal and MIDAS user account. The MIDAS portal is a public space accessible to anyone interested in discovering and viewing published research Data and their metadata, whereas MIDAS user account is available to registered users only. MIDAS is managed by Vilnius University.
OLOS is a Swiss-based data management portal tailored for researchers and institutions. Powerful yet easy to use, OLOS works with most tools and formats across all scientific disciplines to help researchers safely manage, publish and preserve their data. The solution was developed as part of a larger project focusing on Data Life Cycle Management (dlcm.ch) that aims to develop various services for research data management. Thanks to its highly modular architecture, OLOS can be adapted both to small institutions that need a "turnkey" solution and to larger ones that can rely on OLOS to complement what they have already implemented. OLOS is compatible with all formats in use in the different scientific disciplines and is based on modern technology that interconnects with researchers' environments (such as Electronic Laboratory Notebooks or Laboratory Information Management Systems).
The Radboud Data Repository (RDR) is an institutional repository for archiving and sharing of data collected, processed, or analyzed by researchers working at or affiliated with the Radboud University (Nijmegen, the Netherlands). The repository allows safe long-term (at least 10 years) storage of large datasets. The RDR promotes findability of datasets by providing a DOI and rich metadata fields and allows researchers to easily manage data access.
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The USN Research Data Archive is an institutional archive where research data produced and collected by University of South-East Norway's reseachers can be stored, made visible and accessible. The researcher can apply the necessary licenses and possibly put embargo and access restrictions on the research data.
Data@Lincoln is the research data repository for Lincoln University (New Zealand). Datasets may stand alone, or may consist of appendices to theses, or figures or other supplementary material to journal articles and other publications.
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The ZFMK Biodiversity Data Center is aimed at hosting, archiving, publishing and distributing data from biodiversity research and zoological collections. The Biodiversity Data Center handles and curates data on: - The specimens of the institutes collection, including provenance, distribution, habitat, and taxonomic data. - Observations, recordings and measurements from field research, monitoring and ecological inventories. - Morphological measurements, descriptions on specimens, as well as - Genetic barcode libraries, and - Genetic and molecular research data associated with specimens or environmental samples. For this purpose, suitable software and hardware systems are operated and the required infrastructure is further developed. Core components of the software architecture are: The DiversityWorkbench suite for managing all collection-related information. The Digital Asset Management system easyDB for multimedia assets. The description database Morph·D·Base for morphological data sets and character matrices.
figshare allows researchers to publish all of their research outputs in an easily citable, sharable and discoverable manner. All file formats can be published, including videos and datasets. Optional peer review process. figshare uses creative commons licensing. figshare+ repository allows figshare users to share larger datasets, over 20GB up to many TBs, see: https://plus.figshare.com/
ZENODO builds and operates a simple and innovative service that enables researchers, scientists, EU projects and institutions to share and showcase multidisciplinary research results (data and publications) that are not part of the existing institutional or subject-based repositories of the research communities. ZENODO enables researchers, scientists, EU projects and institutions to: easily share the long tail of small research results in a wide variety of formats including text, spreadsheets, audio, video, and images across all fields of science. display their research results and get credited by making the research results citable and integrate them into existing reporting lines to funding agencies like the European Commission. easily access and reuse shared research results.
The Stanford Digital Repository (SDR) is Stanford Libraries' digital preservation system. The core repository provides “back-office” preservation services – data replication, auditing, media migration, and retrieval -- in a secure, sustainable, scalable stewardship environment. Scholars and researchers across disciplines at Stanford use SDR repository services to provide ongoing, persistent, reliable access to their research outputs.