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Featured researches published by Eamonn Maguire.


Bioinformatics | 2010

ISA software suite

Philippe Rocca-Serra; Marco Brandizi; Eamonn Maguire; Nataliya Sklyar; Chris F. Taylor; Kimberly Begley; Dawn Field; Stephen Harris; Winston Hide; Oliver Hofmann; Steffen Neumann; Peter Sterk; Weida Tong; Susanna-Assunta Sansone

Summary: The first open source software suite for experimentalists and curators that (i) assists in the annotation and local management of experimental metadata from high-throughput studies employing one or a combination of omics and other technologies; (ii) empowers users to uptake community-defined checklists and ontologies; and (iii) facilitates submission to international public repositories. Availability and Implementation: Software, documentation, case studies and implementations at http://www.isa-tools.org Contact: [email protected]


eurographics | 2013

Glyph-Based Visualization: Foundations, Design Guidelines, Techniques, and Applications

Rita Borgo; Johannes Kehrer; David H. S. Chung; Eamonn Maguire; Robert S. Laramee; Helwig Hauser; Matthew O. Ward; Min Chen

This state of the art report focuses on glyph-based visualization, a common form of visual design where a data set is depicted by a collection of visual objects referred to as glyphs. Its major strength is that patterns of multivariate data involving more than two attribute dimensions can often be more readily perceived in the context of a spatial relationship, whereas many techniques for spatial data such as direct volume rendering find difficult to depict with multivariate or multi-field data, and many techniques for non-spatial data such as parallel coordinates are less able to convey spatial relationships encoded in the data. This report fills several major gaps in the literature, drawing the link between the fundamental concepts in semiotics and the broad spectrum of glyph-based visualization, reviewing existing design guidelines and implementation techniques, and surveying the use of glyph-based visualization in many applications.


Metabolomics | 2012

MetaboLights: towards a new COSMOS of metabolomics data management

Christoph Steinbeck; Pablo Conesa; Kenneth Haug; Tejasvi Mahendraker; Mark A. Williams; Eamonn Maguire; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Reza M. Salek; Julian L. Griffin

Exciting funding initiatives are emerging in Europe and the US for metabolomics data production, storage, dissemination and analysis. This is based on a rich ecosystem of resources around the world, which has been build during the past ten years, including but not limited to resources such as MassBank in Japan and the Human Metabolome Database in Canada. Now, the European Bioinformatics Institute has launched MetaboLights, a database for metabolomics experiments and the associated metadata (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/metabolights). It is the first comprehensive, cross-species, cross-platform metabolomics database maintained by one of the major open access data providers in molecular biology. In October, the European COSMOS consortium will start its work on Metabolomics data standardization, publication and dissemination workflows. The NIH in the US is establishing 6–8 metabolomics services cores as well as a national metabolomics repository. This communication reports about MetaboLights as a new resource for Metabolomics research, summarises the related developments and outlines how they may consolidate the knowledge management in this third large omics field next to proteomics and genomics.


Database | 2016

BioSharing: curated and crowd-sourced metadata standards, databases and data policies in the life sciences

Peter McQuilton; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Milo Thurston; Allyson L. Lister; Eamonn Maguire; Susanna-Assunta Sansone

BioSharing (http://www.biosharing.org) is a manually curated, searchable portal of three linked registries. These resources cover standards (terminologies, formats and models, and reporting guidelines), databases, and data policies in the life sciences, broadly encompassing the biological, environmental and biomedical sciences. Launched in 2011 and built by the same core team as the successful MIBBI portal, BioSharing harnesses community curation to collate and cross-reference resources across the life sciences from around the world. BioSharing makes these resources findable and accessible (the core of the FAIR principle). Every record is designed to be interlinked, providing a detailed description not only on the resource itself, but also on its relations with other life science infrastructures. Serving a variety of stakeholders, BioSharing cultivates a growing community, to which it offers diverse benefits. It is a resource for funding bodies and journal publishers to navigate the metadata landscape of the biological sciences; an educational resource for librarians and information advisors; a publicising platform for standard and database developers/curators; and a research tool for bench and computer scientists to plan their work. BioSharing is working with an increasing number of journals and other registries, for example linking standards and databases to training material and tools. Driven by an international Advisory Board, the BioSharing user-base has grown by over 40% (by unique IP address), in the last year thanks to successful engagement with researchers, publishers, librarians, developers and other stakeholders via several routes, including a joint RDA/Force11 working group and a collaboration with the International Society for Biocuration. In this article, we describe BioSharing, with a particular focus on community-led curation. Database URL: https://www.biosharing.org


Bioinformatics | 2013

OntoMaton: a Bioportal powered ontology widget for Google Spreadsheets

Eamonn Maguire; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Patricia L. Whetzel; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Philippe Rocca-Serra

Motivation: Data collection in spreadsheets is ubiquitous, but current solutions lack support for collaborative semantic annotation that would promote shared and interdisciplinary annotation practices, supporting geographically distributed players. Results: OntoMaton is an open source solution that brings ontology lookup and tagging capabilities into a cloud-based collaborative editing environment, harnessing Google Spreadsheets and the NCBO Web services. It is a general purpose, format-agnostic tool that may serve as a component of the ISA software suite. OntoMaton can also be used to assist the ontology development process. Availability: OntoMaton is freely available from Google widgets under the CPAL open source license; documentation and examples at: https://github.com/ISA-tools/OntoMaton. Contact: [email protected]


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

The Stem Cell Discovery Engine: an integrated repository and analysis system for cancer stem cell comparisons

Shannan J. Ho Sui; Kimberly Begley; Dorothy Reilly; Brad Chapman; Ray McGovern; Philippe Rocca-Sera; Eamonn Maguire; Gabriel Altschuler; Terah A. A. Hansen; Ramakrishna Sompallae; Andrei V. Krivtsov; Ramesh A. Shivdasani; Scott A. Armstrong; Aedín C. Culhane; Mick Correll; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Oliver Hofmann; Winston Hide

Mounting evidence suggests that malignant tumors are initiated and maintained by a subpopulation of cancerous cells with biological properties similar to those of normal stem cells. However, descriptions of stem-like gene and pathway signatures in cancers are inconsistent across experimental systems. Driven by a need to improve our understanding of molecular processes that are common and unique across cancer stem cells (CSCs), we have developed the Stem Cell Discovery Engine (SCDE)—an online database of curated CSC experiments coupled to the Galaxy analytical framework. The SCDE allows users to consistently describe, share and compare CSC data at the gene and pathway level. Our initial focus has been on carefully curating tissue and cancer stem cell-related experiments from blood, intestine and brain to create a high quality resource containing 53 public studies and 1098 assays. The experimental information is captured and stored in the multi-omics Investigation/Study/Assay (ISA-Tab) format and can be queried in the data repository. A linked Galaxy framework provides a comprehensive, flexible environment populated with novel tools for gene list comparisons against molecular signatures in GeneSigDB and MSigDB, curated experiments in the SCDE and pathways in WikiPathways. The SCDE is available at http://discovery.hsci.harvard.edu.


eurographics | 2013

Rule-based visual mappings - with a case study on poetry visualization

Alfie Abdul-Rahman; Julie Gonnering Lein; Katharine Coles; Eamonn Maguire; Miriah D. Meyer; Martin Wynne; Christopher R. Johnson; Anne E. Trefethen; Min Chen

In this paper, we present a user‐centered design study on poetry visualization. We develop a rule‐based solution to address the conflicting needs for maintaining the flexibility of visualizing a large set of poetic variables and for reducing the tedium and cognitive load in interacting with the visual mapping control panel. We adopt Munzners nested design model to maintain high‐level interactions with the end users in a closed loop. In addition, we examine three design options for alleviating the difficulty in visualizing poems latitudinally. We present several example uses of poetry visualization in scholarly research on poetry.


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2010

Meeting Report from the Second “Minimum Information for Biological and Biomedical Investigations” (MIBBI) workshop

Carsten Kettner; Dawn Field; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Chris F. Taylor; Jan Aerts; Nigel Binns; Andrew Blake; Cedrik M. Britten; Ario de Marco; Jennifer Fostel; Pascale Gaudet; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Nigel Hardy; Jan Hellemans; Henning Hermjakob; Nick Juty; Jim Leebens-Mack; Eamonn Maguire; Steffen Neumann; Sandra Orchard; Helen Parkinson; William H. Piel; Shoba Ranganathan; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Annapaola Santarsiero; David M. Shotton; Peter Sterk; Andreas Untergasser; Patricia L. Whetzel

This report summarizes the proceedings of the second workshop of the ‘Minimum Information for Biological and Biomedical Investigations’ (MIBBI) consortium held on Dec 1–2, 2010 in Rüdesheim, Germany through the sponsorship of the Beilstein-Institute. MIBBI is an umbrella organization uniting communities developing Minimum Information (MI) checklists to standardize the description of data sets, the workflows by which they were generated and the scientific context for the work. This workshop brought together representatives of more than twenty communities to present the status of their MI checklists and plans for future development. Shared challenges and solutions were identified and the role of MIBBI in MI checklist development was discussed. The meeting featured some thirty presentations, wide-ranging discussions and breakout groups. The top outcomes of the two-day workshop as defined by the participants were: 1) the chance to share best practices and to identify areas of synergy; 2) defining a series of tasks for updating the MIBBI Portal; 3) reemphasizing the need to maintain independent MI checklists for various communities while leveraging common terms and workflow elements contained in multiple checklists; and 4) revision of the concept of the MIBBI Foundry to focus on the creation of a core set of MIBBI modules intended for reuse by individual MI checklist projects while maintaining the integrity of each MI project. Further information about MIBBI and its range of activities can be found at http://mibbi.org/.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2008

Dashboard for the LHC experiments

J Andreeva; S Belov; A Berejnoj; C Cirstoiu; Y Chen; T Chen; S Chiu; M D F D Miguel; A Ivanchenko; B Gaidioz; J Herrala; M Janulis; O Kodolova; G Maier; Eamonn Maguire; C Munro; R P Rivera; R Rocha; P Saiz; I Sidorova; F Tsai; E Tikhonenko; E Urbah

In this paper we present the Experiment Dashboard monitoring system, which is currently in use by four Large Hadron Collider (LHC)[1] experiments. The goal of the Experiment Dashboard is to monitor the activities of the LHC experiments on the distributed infrastructure, providing monitoring data from the virtual organization (VO) and user perspectives. The LHC experiments are using various Grid infrastructures (LCG[2]/EGEE[3], OSG[4], NDGF[5]) with correspondingly various middleware flavors and job submission methods. Providing a uniform and complete view of various activities like job processing, data movement and publishing, access to distributed databases regardless of the underlying Grid flavor is the challenging task. In this paper we will describe the Experiment Dashboard concept, its framework and main monitoring applications.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2014

The Risa R/Bioconductor package: integrative data analysis from experimental metadata and back again.

Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Steffen Neumann; Eamonn Maguire; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Philippe Rocca-Serra

BackgroundThe ISA-Tab format and software suite have been developed to break the silo effect induced by technology-specific formats for a variety of data types and to better support experimental metadata tracking. Experimentalists seldom use a single technique to monitor biological signals. Providing a multi-purpose, pragmatic and accessible format that abstracts away common constructs for describing Investigations, Studies and Assays, ISA is increasingly popular. To attract further interest towards the format and extend support to ensure reproducible research and reusable data, we present the Risa package, which delivers a central component to support the ISA format by enabling effortless integration with R, the popular, open source data crunching environment.ResultsThe Risa package bridges the gap between the metadata collection and curation in an ISA-compliant way and the data analysis using the widely used statistical computing environment R. The package offers functionality for: i) parsing ISA-Tab datasets into R objects, ii) augmenting annotation with extra metadata not explicitly stated in the ISA syntax; iii) interfacing with domain specific R packages iv) suggesting potentially useful R packages available in Bioconductor for subsequent processing of the experimental data described in the ISA format; and finally v) saving back to ISA-Tab files augmented with analysis specific metadata from R. We demonstrate these features by presenting use cases for mass spectrometry data and DNA microarray data.ConclusionsThe Risa package is open source (with LGPL license) and freely available through Bioconductor. By making Risa available, we aim to facilitate the task of processing experimental data, encouraging a uniform representation of experimental information and results while delivering tools for ensuring traceability and provenance tracking.Software availabilityThe Risa package is available since Bioconductor 2.11 (version 1.0.0) and version 1.2.1 appeared in Bioconductor 2.12, both along with documentation and examples. The latest version of the code is at the development branch in Bioconductor and can also be accessed from GitHub https://github.com/ISA-tools/Risa, where the issue tracker allows users to report bugs or feature requests.

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Min Chen

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Chris F. Taylor

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Peter Sterk

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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