+1 

Or another time?  

I signed on, but couldn't stay had to catch a train (FYI - highly recommend the 
train to/from Rensselaer / NY city. Beautiful ride along the east bank of the 
Hudson river (2.5 hrs for planning purposes))

Sorry to miss you Katy!

Also, in case any of you have not seem Katy's earlier work on classifying 
phosphotases check it out.  It is a beautiful straightforward example of using 
defined classes in OWL and reasoners to do science. I have used that example 
many times.

Katy- were you able to get the wet lab experiment done to look for the 
unclassified phosphate?

Joanne

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 18, 2012, at 10:58 AM, "M. Scott Marshall" <mscottmarsh...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

> Regrets. Any chance of a webex recording?
> 
> Cheers,
> Scott
> 
> On Apr 18, 2012 12:42 PM, "Helena Deus" <helenad...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear All, 
> 
> Please join me tomorrow at the Systems Biology Task force, where Katherine 
> Wolstencroft will give us an overview of SEEK.
> 
> PLEASE NOTE: Like last time, we will attempt to use webex for slide sharing, 
> so I will share the webex link on IRC at 11AM EDT today. 
> 
> SEEK: An e-Laboratory for Systems Biology in Europe
> Franco B. Du Preez(1), Stuart Owen(2), Katherine Wolstencroft(2), Olga 
> Krebs(3), Quyen Nguyen(3), Wolfgang Müller(3), Carole Goble(2) & Jacky L. 
> Snoep(4)
> 
> The SEEK is an open-source, web-based platform for the management and 
> exchange of Systems Biology data, models and processes. It was originally 
> developed in the SysMO-DB project (http://www.sysmodb.org) for the 
> pan-European SysMO consortia (Systems Biology of Micro Organisms). However, 
> it is now also being adopted by a large number of other consortia across 
> Europe, for example, the Virtual Liver, EviMalar and Unicellsys.
> The SEEK is an e-Laboratory. In addition to providing a registry and 
> repository of Systems Biology data, it provides facilities for model 
> simulation, data exploration and is a gateway to other useful resources, such 
> as JWS Online, BioModels and the BioPortal. Taverna workflows will also be 
> available for discovering and running through SEEK, giving SEEK users access 
> to a collection of complex Systems Biology analysis methods and data 
> integration protocols (http://www.myexperiment.org/packs/47.html)
> Underlying the SEEK is the JERM (Just Enough Results Model), which is a 
> minimum information model describing the relationships between SEEK assets. 
> The JERM incorporates the ISA structure (Investigation, Study, Assay) to 
> associate data with the assays that generated them, and to allow the 
> aggregation of assays into wider studies and investigations. JERM data 
> compliance is managed by the distribution of JERM spreadsheet templates, 
> which can be semantically enabled with RightField, a tool that embeds 
> collections of ontology terms into specific spreadsheet cells. Ongoing work 
> is exploring extracting, storing and querying collected data and metadata in 
> RDF.    
> 1.Manchester Interdisciplinary Biocentre, University of Manchester, UK
> 2.School of Computer Science, University of Manchester, UK
> 3.Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies (Hits), gGmbH, Germany
> 4.Department of Biochemistry, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
> 
> Katy Wolstencroft
> I am a Research Fellow at the University of Manchester and a visiting 
> researcher at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. I am a member of the 
> SysMO-DB project and the myGrid consortium. My background is in 
> bioinformatics and my work focuses on data integration, semantic data 
> integration and scientific workflows. 
> Stuart Owen is a Software Architect at the University of Manchester. He is a 
> member of the SysMO-DB project and the myGrid consortium. He has a long 
> background in Software Engineering, with a particular focus on Knowledge 
> Management.
> 
> Conference Details
> Systems Biology
> http://www.w3.org/wiki/HCLSIG/SysBio
>  
>  Date of Call: Wednesday April 18 2012
>  Time of Call: 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT 
>  Dial-In #: +1.617.761.6200 (Cambridge, MA) 
>  Dial-In #: +33.4.26.46.79.03 (Paris, France) 
>  Dial-In #: +44.203.318.0479 (London, UK) 
>  Participant Access Code: 4257 ("HCLS")
>  IRC Channel: irc.w3.org port 6665 channel #HCLS (see 
> [http://www.w3.org/Project/IRC/ W3C IRC page] for details, or see 
> [http://cgi.w3.org/member-bin/irc/irc.cgi Web IRC]) 
>  Mibbit quick start: Click on 
> [http://www.mibbit.com/chat/?server=irc.w3.org:6665&channel=%23hcls mibbit] 
> for instant IRC access
>  Duration: 1h 
>  Convener: Helena F Deus
>  
> Agenda
> * Katy's talk
> * Ideas about next invited speakers
> * Volunteers to start looking at systems biology models
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Helena F. Deus
> Post-Doctoral Researcher at DERI/NUIG
> http://lenadeus.info/

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