A 15 minute presentation giving an introduction to FAIRsharing, an ELIXIR Interoperability Platform resource of curated and linked information on standards, databases and policies.
BioSharing, an ELIXIR Interoperability Platform resourcePeter McQuilton
A 20 minute presentation given at the 9th RDA Plenary in Barcelona as part of the BioSharing WG - ELIXIR Bridging Force IG session. This presentation covers the basics of what BioSharing is, who it's for, and how it captures and connects information on data standards, databases and data policies from the life, biomedical and environmental sciences.
RDA Data Innovation Forum: FAIRsharing.org, an output of the joint RDA/Force ...Peter McQuilton
A 15 minute presentation at the RDA Data Innovation Forum in Brussels on the 20th January. This presentation covers the RDA/Force11 WG and FAIRsharing, mapping the landscape of data standards, databases and data policies.
RDA Plenary 9 BioSharing WG output/recommendationPeter McQuilton
A 10 minute talk given at the RDA Plenary 9 meeting in Barcelona, April 2017. This talk covers the work performed over the past 18 months in the joint RDA/Force11 WG. This WG has two main outputs, a set of guidelines for how one can link data policies, databases and data standards (in the life sciences); and the BioSharing registry (building upon the prototype).
2021 04 Introduction to FAIRsharing - cinecaAllyson Lister
Part of the The “How FAIR are you” webinar series and hackathon, which aim at increasing and facilitating the uptake of FAIR approaches into software, training materials and cohort data, to facilitate responsible and ethical data and resource sharing and implementation of federated applications for data analysis.
More information at
* the webinar page: https://www.cineca-project.eu/news-events-all/how-fair-are-you-hackathon
* the recording of the talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdGZOynyuGo
The BioSharing portal - linking databases, data standards and policies in the...Peter McQuilton
A 15 minute presentation for the Interest Group on Agricultural Data (IGAD) RDA pre-meeting meeting. Presented in Barcelona (ES) on Monday 3rd April, 2017.
Breif overview of FAIR and FAIRsharing, with focus on publishers for the Euroscience Open Forum (ESOF) 2020 session on FAIR and Data Sharing:
https://www.esof.eu/en/programme/programme-event-list-all-events/event-information/scientific-data-sharing-and-its-impact-on-scientific-careers-and-their-evaluation.html
Overview of the role of FAIRsharing and a dedicated Collection of data resources (platforms and registries that collect, harmonize, and share participant-level clinical-epidemiological, OMICs, and/or imaging data) for the COVID-19 Clinical Research Coalition and The Tropical Disease Research initiatives: https://coronavirus.tghn.org/research-resources/data-sharing-covid-19
The FAIR Cookbook poster, as presented at the ELIXIR-UK Node and the UK Conference of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology 2021: https://www.earlham.ac.uk/uk-conference-bioinformatics-and-computational-biology-21
BioSharing, an ELIXIR Interoperability Platform resourcePeter McQuilton
A 20 minute presentation given at the 9th RDA Plenary in Barcelona as part of the BioSharing WG - ELIXIR Bridging Force IG session. This presentation covers the basics of what BioSharing is, who it's for, and how it captures and connects information on data standards, databases and data policies from the life, biomedical and environmental sciences.
RDA Data Innovation Forum: FAIRsharing.org, an output of the joint RDA/Force ...Peter McQuilton
A 15 minute presentation at the RDA Data Innovation Forum in Brussels on the 20th January. This presentation covers the RDA/Force11 WG and FAIRsharing, mapping the landscape of data standards, databases and data policies.
RDA Plenary 9 BioSharing WG output/recommendationPeter McQuilton
A 10 minute talk given at the RDA Plenary 9 meeting in Barcelona, April 2017. This talk covers the work performed over the past 18 months in the joint RDA/Force11 WG. This WG has two main outputs, a set of guidelines for how one can link data policies, databases and data standards (in the life sciences); and the BioSharing registry (building upon the prototype).
2021 04 Introduction to FAIRsharing - cinecaAllyson Lister
Part of the The “How FAIR are you” webinar series and hackathon, which aim at increasing and facilitating the uptake of FAIR approaches into software, training materials and cohort data, to facilitate responsible and ethical data and resource sharing and implementation of federated applications for data analysis.
More information at
* the webinar page: https://www.cineca-project.eu/news-events-all/how-fair-are-you-hackathon
* the recording of the talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdGZOynyuGo
The BioSharing portal - linking databases, data standards and policies in the...Peter McQuilton
A 15 minute presentation for the Interest Group on Agricultural Data (IGAD) RDA pre-meeting meeting. Presented in Barcelona (ES) on Monday 3rd April, 2017.
Breif overview of FAIR and FAIRsharing, with focus on publishers for the Euroscience Open Forum (ESOF) 2020 session on FAIR and Data Sharing:
https://www.esof.eu/en/programme/programme-event-list-all-events/event-information/scientific-data-sharing-and-its-impact-on-scientific-careers-and-their-evaluation.html
Overview of the role of FAIRsharing and a dedicated Collection of data resources (platforms and registries that collect, harmonize, and share participant-level clinical-epidemiological, OMICs, and/or imaging data) for the COVID-19 Clinical Research Coalition and The Tropical Disease Research initiatives: https://coronavirus.tghn.org/research-resources/data-sharing-covid-19
The FAIR Cookbook poster, as presented at the ELIXIR-UK Node and the UK Conference of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology 2021: https://www.earlham.ac.uk/uk-conference-bioinformatics-and-computational-biology-21
Overview of FAIR and the IMI FAIRplus project at the UK Conference of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology 2020: https://www.earlham.ac.uk/uk-conference-bioinformatics-and-computational-biology-2020
A 30 minute presentation given as a webinar as part of the ELIXIR series (https://www.elixir-europe.org/events/webinars/previous). This presentation covers the history of BioSharing, what it covers (data standards, databases and data policies), and our community collaborations and data sharing.
Presentation to the EC Workshop on Maximizing investments in health research: FAIR data for a coordinate COVID-19 response. Workshop I, October 11, 2021.
A 10 minute presentation given at the RDA UK meeting in London (Jan 2019). This presentation covers FAIRsharing work as part of the RDA/Force11 FAIRsharing WG.
FAIRsharing presentation at the Japan Science and Technology AgencyPeter McQuilton
A 30 minute seminar presented at the National Bioscience Database Center, part of the Japanese Science and Technology Agency, based in Tokyo, Japan. This presentation covers the FAIR Principles, the aims, methodology and use of FAIRsharing, related projects such as Bioschemas, and international initiatives such as ELIXIR and EOSC.
Presented at http://mcbios-maqc.org. The FAIR Principles have propelled the global debate in all disciplines about better RDM, transparent and reproducible data worldwide, and in all disciplines. FAIR has de facto become a global norm for good RDM, a prerequisite for data science, since their endorsement by global and intergovernmental leaders. Funding bodies are consolidating FAIR into their funding agreements; publishers have united behind FAIR as a way to remain at the forefront of open research; and in the private sector FAIR is adopted and enshrined in policy in major biopharmas, libraries, and unions. FAIR is changing the culture of data science, but work is needed to turn the principles into reality. I will use the work of the FAIRplus project as examplar to illustrate challenges and progresses.
Brief introduction to FAIRsharing work with industry (publishers, pharmas) and the FAIR Cookbook (for the Life Science): https://www.opensciencefair.eu/2021/workshops/applying-fair-principles-to-open-science-and-industry-to-drive-innovation-challenges-and-opportunities
Westminster Higher Education Forum policy conference Open research data in the UK: https://www.westminsterforumprojects.co.uk/conference/open-research-data-20
Brief summary for the INCF Neuroscience Assembly (https://neuroinformatics.incf.org/2021/program-week-2) of the two sessions run at the RDA Plenary 17th, which FAIRsharing WG has contributed t.
A 10 minute presentation for the virtual ELIXIR All Hands Meeting 2020 - FAIRification mini symposium. In this presentation I talk about some of the community work we do in FAIRsharing, from sharing our metadata with other resources to research on data policy repository criteria.
The BioSharing portal - linking journal and funder data policies to databases...Peter McQuilton
A 20 minute talk on the BioSharing portal, focusing on our work to link journal and funder data policies to the databases and data standards that they recommend/endorse. This was presented as part of a session on data policies in the life sciences with representation from JISC and Springer Nature.
RDA Webinar - BioSharing - mapping the landscape of data standards, repositor...Peter McQuilton
A 30 minute webinar presented on behalf of the RDA/Force11 BioSharing WG, covering our work to map data standards, databases, and data policies in the life, biomedical and environmental sciences.
Overview of FAIR and the IMI FAIRplus project at the UK Conference of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology 2020: https://www.earlham.ac.uk/uk-conference-bioinformatics-and-computational-biology-2020
A 30 minute presentation given as a webinar as part of the ELIXIR series (https://www.elixir-europe.org/events/webinars/previous). This presentation covers the history of BioSharing, what it covers (data standards, databases and data policies), and our community collaborations and data sharing.
Presentation to the EC Workshop on Maximizing investments in health research: FAIR data for a coordinate COVID-19 response. Workshop I, October 11, 2021.
A 10 minute presentation given at the RDA UK meeting in London (Jan 2019). This presentation covers FAIRsharing work as part of the RDA/Force11 FAIRsharing WG.
FAIRsharing presentation at the Japan Science and Technology AgencyPeter McQuilton
A 30 minute seminar presented at the National Bioscience Database Center, part of the Japanese Science and Technology Agency, based in Tokyo, Japan. This presentation covers the FAIR Principles, the aims, methodology and use of FAIRsharing, related projects such as Bioschemas, and international initiatives such as ELIXIR and EOSC.
Presented at http://mcbios-maqc.org. The FAIR Principles have propelled the global debate in all disciplines about better RDM, transparent and reproducible data worldwide, and in all disciplines. FAIR has de facto become a global norm for good RDM, a prerequisite for data science, since their endorsement by global and intergovernmental leaders. Funding bodies are consolidating FAIR into their funding agreements; publishers have united behind FAIR as a way to remain at the forefront of open research; and in the private sector FAIR is adopted and enshrined in policy in major biopharmas, libraries, and unions. FAIR is changing the culture of data science, but work is needed to turn the principles into reality. I will use the work of the FAIRplus project as examplar to illustrate challenges and progresses.
Brief introduction to FAIRsharing work with industry (publishers, pharmas) and the FAIR Cookbook (for the Life Science): https://www.opensciencefair.eu/2021/workshops/applying-fair-principles-to-open-science-and-industry-to-drive-innovation-challenges-and-opportunities
Westminster Higher Education Forum policy conference Open research data in the UK: https://www.westminsterforumprojects.co.uk/conference/open-research-data-20
Brief summary for the INCF Neuroscience Assembly (https://neuroinformatics.incf.org/2021/program-week-2) of the two sessions run at the RDA Plenary 17th, which FAIRsharing WG has contributed t.
A 10 minute presentation for the virtual ELIXIR All Hands Meeting 2020 - FAIRification mini symposium. In this presentation I talk about some of the community work we do in FAIRsharing, from sharing our metadata with other resources to research on data policy repository criteria.
The BioSharing portal - linking journal and funder data policies to databases...Peter McQuilton
A 20 minute talk on the BioSharing portal, focusing on our work to link journal and funder data policies to the databases and data standards that they recommend/endorse. This was presented as part of a session on data policies in the life sciences with representation from JISC and Springer Nature.
RDA Webinar - BioSharing - mapping the landscape of data standards, repositor...Peter McQuilton
A 30 minute webinar presented on behalf of the RDA/Force11 BioSharing WG, covering our work to map data standards, databases, and data policies in the life, biomedical and environmental sciences.
Rafael Jimenez presents the FAIRSharing on behalf of Peter McQuilton, Susanna-Assunta Sansone & the FAIRsharing team | OSFair2017 Workshop
Workshop title: How FAIR friendly is your data catalogue?
Workshop overview:
This workshop will build upon the work planned by the EOSCpilot data interoperability task and the BlueBridge workshop held on April 3 at the RDA meeting. We will investigate common mechanisms for interoperation of data catalogues that preserve established community standards, norms and resources, while simplifying the process of being/becoming FAIR. Can we have a simple interoperability architecture based on a common set of metadata types? What are the minimum metadata requirements to expose FAIR data to EOSC services and EOSC users?
DAY 3 - PARALLEL SESSION 6 & 7
Cross-linked metadata standards, repositories and the data policies - The Bio...Peter McQuilton
A 20 minute presentation given in Denver (CO) on the 17th September as part of the Biosharing Registry WG, Metadata Standards Catalog WG, and Publishing Data Workflows WG joint session at the Research Data Alliance 8th Plenary (part of International Data Week).
This presentation covers the explosion of metadata standards and databases in the life, biomedical and environmental sciences and how BioSharing is helping to understand this landscape, both in terms of the relationship between standards and other standards and databases, and the life cycle and evolution of each resource. BioSharing also links these resources to the data policies that recommend them (for example, from funding agencies or journal publishers), enabling an understanding of the entire data cycle, from conception to publishing and storage.
FAIRsharing Keynote - International Workshop on Sharing, Citation and Publica...Peter McQuilton
A 30 minute presentation on FAIRsharing given at the International Workshop on Sharing, Citation and Publication of
Scientific Data across Disciplines in Tachikawa, Tokyo, Japan on Tuesday 5th December, 2017
FAIRsharing - Mapping the Landscape of Databases, Repositories, Standards and...Peter McQuilton
A 15 minute slide set presented at two workshops at #biocuration2019; the first on ontologies and FAIRification, the second to map the landscape of biocuration.
Using community-defined metadata standards in the FAIR principles: how BioSha...Peter McQuilton
A 10 minute presentation given in Denver (CO) on the 16th September as part of the IG Elixir Bridging Force and Biosharing Registry WG joint session at the Research Data Alliance 8th Plenary (part of International Data Week).
This presentation covers the use of community-defined metadata standards in the life science, making these standards FAIR, and how BioSharing can help.
A 15 minutes presentation to the SCDS IUPAC Workshop in Amsterdam on the 16-17th July 2018. This presentation also introduces the current state of chemistry-related standards, databases and data policies in FAIRsharing (all included in a Collection in FAIRsharing), and an outline of the workshop conducted at the meeting.
FAIRsharing and DataCite: Data Repository Selection- Criteria That MatterSusanna-Assunta Sansone
Through a collaboration with Datacite, FAIRsharing is working with a number of journal publishers (PLOS, Springer Nature, F1000, Wiley, Taylor and Francis, Elsevier, EMBO Press, eLife, GigaScience and Cambridge University Press) to identify a common set of criteria for selecting and recommending data repositories (and associated standards) that will be implemented in FAIRsharing. Details of this work and participants at https://osf.io/m2bce
Overview to: BBSRC Oxford Doctoral Training Partnership - Dr Sansone - July 2014Susanna-Assunta Sansone
What to know when planning for your data management strategy and preparing a data management statement for a research proposal for BBSRC DTP first year students
Making Repositories FAIR (via metadata in FAIRsharing.orgPeter McQuilton
A 10 minute presentation on how we can make repositories FAIR, primarily through storing their metadata on FAIRsharing.org. Presented at the FAIRsFAIR FAIR Semantics & FAIR Repositories pre-RDA P14 meeting in Helsinki, Finland on the 22nd October 2019. FAIRsharing can be used to edit and store metadata on repositories from across the natural sciences, engineering sciences, social sciences and humanities. This metadata is marked-up in schema.org and bioschemas (where relevant) and is given a citable DOI. This metadata can be used to power DMP tools and wizards and can also be used to perform FAIR assessments, such as through the FAIR evaluator or FAIRshake.
The Diversity of Biomedical Data, Databases and Standards (Research Data Alli...Peter McQuilton
A 10 minute presentation given in Denver (CO) on the 15th September as part of the IG Elixir Bridging Force, WG Biosharing Registry,WG Data Type Registries,WG Metadata Standards Catalog joint session of the Research Data Alliance 8th Plenary (part of International Data Week).
This presentation covers the proliferation of data, databases, and data standards in biomedicine, and how BioSharing can help inform and educate users on this landscape and relationships between data, databases and data standards.
FAIRsharing: curation and governance of an ecosystem of research standards an...Allyson Lister
FAIRsharing is an informative and educational resource on interlinked standards (including terminologies), databases and policies, three key elements of the FAIR ecosystem. FAIRsharing is adopted by funders, publishers and communities across all research disciplines. It promotes the existence and value of these resources to aid data sharing and consequently requires a high standard of curation to ensure accurate and timely information is provided across all of our stakeholder groups. Here I discuss the methods employed and challenges faced during curation and maintenance of existing content, as well as the introduction of new features. I will cover how we store machine- and human-accessible metadata, including governance information, and the methods we use to determine what common metadata we should describe. I also will discuss the benefits of both in-house curation and community-driven curation by our stakeholder groups.
A 15 minute presentation covering the terms4FAIRskills project from conception in Jan 2019 until now. This presentation covers the methodology, model iteration and terminology building. Presented at RDA VP17 in the Professionalising Data Stewardship session.
This 15min presentation covers work from the FAIRsharing WG, including covering FAIRsharing.org, one of our RDA endorsed outputs, and our work with journal publishers and DataCite to define Repository Selection Criteria for journal and journal publisher data policies.
A presentation on FAIR, FAIRsharing and the FAIR ecosystem for the ENVRI-FAIR community on the 13th December 2019. This presentation covers the basics of what FAIR is, how FAIRsharing can help 'FAIRify' standards, repositories, knowledgebases and data policies, and then the connections FAIRsharing has with other initiatives, such as the FAIR Evaluator, Data Stewardship Wizard, our RDA WG, GO-FAIR and EOSC-Life.
FAIR StRePo - GO TRAIN Workshop, Hamburg, November 2019Peter McQuilton
A short 5 minute presentation on the GO FAIR StRePo Implementation Network. This presentation introduces FAIR StRePo, covering our work to map the landscape of standards, repositories and policies across the GO-FAIR network and particularly our work in GO-TRAIN, FAIRassist.org and terms4FAIRskills.
FAIRsharing - connecting standards, repositories and data policies across agr...Peter McQuilton
A 10 minute presentation on FAIRsharing, highlighting the manually curated metadata we provide on agri-related standards (ontologies, reporting guidelines, identifier schema, models and formats), databases (both knowledgebases and repositories) and data policies from funders and journal publishers. Presented at the RDA P14 meeting in Helsinki, Finland (October 2019).
FAIRsharing - manually curated metadata on standards, repositories and data p...Peter McQuilton
A 10 minute presentation on FAIRsharing, highlighting the manually curated metadata we provide on domain specific and cross-domain standards (ontologies, reporting guidelines, identifier schema, models and formats), databases (both knowledgebases and repositories) and data policies from funders and journal publishers. Presented at the RDA P14 meeting in Helsinki, Finland (October 2019).
A 10 minute presentation on the relationship between semantic terminologies and repositories. Presented at the FAIRsFAIR FAIR Semantics & FAIR Repositories pre-RDA P14 meeting in Helsinki, Finland on the 22nd October 2019. FAIRsharing can describe and display these relationships in a way that allows users to understand which standards are most adopted by the community and which terminologies are used by particular repositories across the natural sciences, engineering sciences, social sciences and humanities.
ELIXIR Standards and Formats: ISA Tools and FAIRsharingPeter McQuilton
A 15 minute presentation at the ELIXIR Europe/ELIXIR-UK SME Forum at Churchill College, Cambridge UK. This talk focuses on ISA-tools and FAIRsharing.org, around standard use, data sharing and data standard implementation and endorsement.
FAIR landscape in ELIXIR: FAIR metrics and other initiativesPeter McQuilton
A 15 minute talk presented at the ELIXIR Europe/ELIXIR UK SME Forum at Churchill College in Cambridge, UK in January 2018. This talk reviews the work our group does in relation to the FAIR principles as part of ELIXIR and beyond.
hematic appreciation test is a psychological assessment tool used to measure an individual's appreciation and understanding of specific themes or topics. This test helps to evaluate an individual's ability to connect different ideas and concepts within a given theme, as well as their overall comprehension and interpretation skills. The results of the test can provide valuable insights into an individual's cognitive abilities, creativity, and critical thinking skills
Seminar of U.V. Spectroscopy by SAMIR PANDASAMIR PANDA
Spectroscopy is a branch of science dealing the study of interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter.
Ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy refers to absorption spectroscopy or reflect spectroscopy in the UV-VIS spectral region.
Ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy is an analytical method that can measure the amount of light received by the analyte.
Travis Hills' Endeavors in Minnesota: Fostering Environmental and Economic Pr...Travis Hills MN
Travis Hills of Minnesota developed a method to convert waste into high-value dry fertilizer, significantly enriching soil quality. By providing farmers with a valuable resource derived from waste, Travis Hills helps enhance farm profitability while promoting environmental stewardship. Travis Hills' sustainable practices lead to cost savings and increased revenue for farmers by improving resource efficiency and reducing waste.
Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intellige...University of Maribor
Slides from talk:
Aleš Zamuda: Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intelligent Systems.
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Inter-Society Networking Panel GRSS/MTT-S/CIS Panel Session: Promoting Connection and Cooperation
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
Phenomics assisted breeding in crop improvementIshaGoswami9
As the population is increasing and will reach about 9 billion upto 2050. Also due to climate change, it is difficult to meet the food requirement of such a large population. Facing the challenges presented by resource shortages, climate
change, and increasing global population, crop yield and quality need to be improved in a sustainable way over the coming decades. Genetic improvement by breeding is the best way to increase crop productivity. With the rapid progression of functional
genomics, an increasing number of crop genomes have been sequenced and dozens of genes influencing key agronomic traits have been identified. However, current genome sequence information has not been adequately exploited for understanding
the complex characteristics of multiple gene, owing to a lack of crop phenotypic data. Efficient, automatic, and accurate technologies and platforms that can capture phenotypic data that can
be linked to genomics information for crop improvement at all growth stages have become as important as genotyping. Thus,
high-throughput phenotyping has become the major bottleneck restricting crop breeding. Plant phenomics has been defined as the high-throughput, accurate acquisition and analysis of multi-dimensional phenotypes
during crop growing stages at the organism level, including the cell, tissue, organ, individual plant, plot, and field levels. With the rapid development of novel sensors, imaging technology,
and analysis methods, numerous infrastructure platforms have been developed for phenotyping.
Richard's aventures in two entangled wonderlandsRichard Gill
Since the loophole-free Bell experiments of 2020 and the Nobel prizes in physics of 2022, critics of Bell's work have retreated to the fortress of super-determinism. Now, super-determinism is a derogatory word - it just means "determinism". Palmer, Hance and Hossenfelder argue that quantum mechanics and determinism are not incompatible, using a sophisticated mathematical construction based on a subtle thinning of allowed states and measurements in quantum mechanics, such that what is left appears to make Bell's argument fail, without altering the empirical predictions of quantum mechanics. I think however that it is a smoke screen, and the slogan "lost in math" comes to my mind. I will discuss some other recent disproofs of Bell's theorem using the language of causality based on causal graphs. Causal thinking is also central to law and justice. I will mention surprising connections to my work on serial killer nurse cases, in particular the Dutch case of Lucia de Berk and the current UK case of Lucy Letby.
Comparing Evolved Extractive Text Summary Scores of Bidirectional Encoder Rep...University of Maribor
Slides from:
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Track: Artificial Intelligence
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
Deep Behavioral Phenotyping in Systems Neuroscience for Functional Atlasing a...Ana Luísa Pinho
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) provides means to characterize brain activations in response to behavior. However, cognitive neuroscience has been limited to group-level effects referring to the performance of specific tasks. To obtain the functional profile of elementary cognitive mechanisms, the combination of brain responses to many tasks is required. Yet, to date, both structural atlases and parcellation-based activations do not fully account for cognitive function and still present several limitations. Further, they do not adapt overall to individual characteristics. In this talk, I will give an account of deep-behavioral phenotyping strategies, namely data-driven methods in large task-fMRI datasets, to optimize functional brain-data collection and improve inference of effects-of-interest related to mental processes. Key to this approach is the employment of fast multi-functional paradigms rich on features that can be well parametrized and, consequently, facilitate the creation of psycho-physiological constructs to be modelled with imaging data. Particular emphasis will be given to music stimuli when studying high-order cognitive mechanisms, due to their ecological nature and quality to enable complex behavior compounded by discrete entities. I will also discuss how deep-behavioral phenotyping and individualized models applied to neuroimaging data can better account for the subject-specific organization of domain-general cognitive systems in the human brain. Finally, the accumulation of functional brain signatures brings the possibility to clarify relationships among tasks and create a univocal link between brain systems and mental functions through: (1) the development of ontologies proposing an organization of cognitive processes; and (2) brain-network taxonomies describing functional specialization. To this end, tools to improve commensurability in cognitive science are necessary, such as public repositories, ontology-based platforms and automated meta-analysis tools. I will thus discuss some brain-atlasing resources currently under development, and their applicability in cognitive as well as clinical neuroscience.
This presentation explores a brief idea about the structural and functional attributes of nucleotides, the structure and function of genetic materials along with the impact of UV rays and pH upon them.
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
Salas, V. (2024) "John of St. Thomas (Poinsot) on the Science of Sacred Theol...Studia Poinsotiana
I Introduction
II Subalternation and Theology
III Theology and Dogmatic Declarations
IV The Mixed Principles of Theology
V Virtual Revelation: The Unity of Theology
VI Theology as a Natural Science
VII Theology’s Certitude
VIII Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
All the contents are fully attributable to the author, Doctor Victor Salas. Should you wish to get this text republished, get in touch with the author or the editorial committee of the Studia Poinsotiana. Insofar as possible, we will be happy to broker your contact.
Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
ESR spectroscopy in liquid food and beverages.pptxPRIYANKA PATEL
With increasing population, people need to rely on packaged food stuffs. Packaging of food materials requires the preservation of food. There are various methods for the treatment of food to preserve them and irradiation treatment of food is one of them. It is the most common and the most harmless method for the food preservation as it does not alter the necessary micronutrients of food materials. Although irradiated food doesn’t cause any harm to the human health but still the quality assessment of food is required to provide consumers with necessary information about the food. ESR spectroscopy is the most sophisticated way to investigate the quality of the food and the free radicals induced during the processing of the food. ESR spin trapping technique is useful for the detection of highly unstable radicals in the food. The antioxidant capability of liquid food and beverages in mainly performed by spin trapping technique.
1. www.elixir-europe.org
ELIXIR All Hands 2017, 21-23 March, Rome, Italy
FAIRsharing: linking standards,
repositories and policies
Peter McQuilton
RDA 10th Plenary, September 2017, Montrèal, Canada
2. A web-based, curated, and searchable portal that monitors the
development and evolution of data and metadata standards,
across all disciplines, inter-related to databases/repositories and
data policies
FAIRsharing has grown organically from BioSharing.org, which
covered standards, databases and policies in the life,
environmental and biomedical sciences.
*
*
A resource of the ELIXIR Interoperability
Platform
3. Content standards
Formats Terminologies Guidelines
Models/Formats = Conceptual
model, conceptual schema,
exchange formats
Terminologies = Controlled
vocabularies, taxonomies,
thesauri, ontologies etc.
Guidelines = Minimum
information reporting
requirements, checklists
Mapping a complex and evolving
landscape
4. Content standards
Data policies by
funders, journals
and other
organizations
Databases, tools
and services
Formats Terminologies Guidelines
Mapping a complex and evolving
landscape
5. 270
48
23
2
97
87 4
204
9 6 8
Paper in preparation,
preliminary information as of July 2017
Ready for use, implementation, or recommendation
In development
Status uncertain
Deprecated as subsumed or superseded
All records are manually curated
in-house and verified by the
community behind each resource
Assigning status indicators
6. Helping users
make the right
decision
My funder’s data policy recommends the use of
established standards, but which are widely endorsed
and applicable to my clinical disease data?
We need a standard for sharing
cell line data, what’s out there and
who should we talk to?
I have some old rice genomic data in
format X, which is now deprecated; what
format has replaced X?
What databases are heavily
supported in the community that we
should recommend to our authors?
12. Collections group
together one or more
types of resource by
domain, project or
organization.
Recommendations are a
core-set of resources that
are selected and
recommended by a funder
or journal data policy.
Grouping the data
15. Data Policy
List of their
recommended
databases and standards
…to inform and educate on existing and
new resources
16.
17.
18. Standard developing groups, incl:Journal, publishers, incl:
Cross-links, data exchange, incl:
Societies and organisations,
incl:
Institutional RDM services, incl:
Projects, programmes:
Working with and for the community