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Dive into the research topics where Leyla Garcia is active.

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Featured researches published by Leyla Garcia.


Bioinformatics | 2014

The EBI RDF platform: linked open data for the life sciences

Simon Jupp; James Malone; Jerven T. Bolleman; Marco Brandizi; Mark Davies; Leyla Garcia; Anna Gaulton; Sebastien Gehant; Camille Laibe; Nicole Redaschi; Sarala M. Wimalaratne; María Martín; Nicolas Le Novère; Helen Parkinson; Ewan Birney; Andrew M. Jenkinson

Motivation: Resource description framework (RDF) is an emerging technology for describing, publishing and linking life science data. As a major provider of bioinformatics data and services, the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) is committed to making data readily accessible to the community in ways that meet existing demand. The EBI RDF platform has been developed to meet an increasing demand to coordinate RDF activities across the institute and provides a new entry point to querying and exploring integrated resources available at the EBI. Availability: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/rdf Contact: [email protected]


Bioinformatics | 2013

BioJS: an open source JavaScript framework for biological data visualization.

John Gomez; Leyla Garcia; Gustavo A. Salazar; Jose M. Villaveces; Swanand Gore; Alexander Garcia; María Martín; Guillaume Launay; Rafael Alcántara; Noemi del-Toro; Marine Dumousseau; Sandra Orchard; Sameer Velankar; Henning Hermjakob; Chenggong Zong; Peipei Ping; Manuel Corpas; Rafael C. Jimenez

SUMMARY BioJS is an open-source project whose main objective is the visualization of biological data in JavaScript. BioJS provides an easy-to-use consistent framework for bioinformatics application programmers. It follows a community-driven standard specification that includes a collection of components purposely designed to require a very simple configuration and installation. In addition to the programming framework, BioJS provides a centralized repository of components available for reutilization by the bioinformatics community. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION http://code.google.com/p/biojs/. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


F1000Research | 2014

BioJS: an open source standard for biological visualisation - its status in 2014.

Manuel Corpas; Rafael C. Jimenez; Seth Carbon; Alexander Garcia; Leyla Garcia; Tatyana Goldberg; John Gomez; Alexis Kalderimis; Suzanna E. Lewis; Ian Mulvany; Aleksandra Pawlik; Francis Rowland; Gustavo A. Salazar; Fabian Schreiber; Ian Sillitoe; William H Spooner; Anil Thanki; Jose M. Villaveces; Guy Yachdav; Henning Hermjakob

BioJS is a community-based standard and repository of functional components to represent biological information on the web. The development of BioJS has been prompted by the growing need for bioinformatics visualisation tools to be easily shared, reused and discovered. Its modular architecture makes it easy for users to find a specific functionality without needing to know how it has been built, while components can be extended or created for implementing new functionality. The BioJS community of developers currently provides a range of functionality that is open access and freely available. A registry has been set up that categorises and provides installation instructions and testing facilities at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/tools/biojs/. The source code for all components is available for ready use at https://github.com/biojs/biojs.


eLife | 2015

Anatomy of BioJS, an open source community for the life sciences

Guy Yachdav; Tatyana Goldberg; Sebastian Wilzbach; David Dao; Iris Shih; Saket Choudhary; Steve Crouch; Max Franz; Alexander Garcia; Leyla Garcia; Björn Grüning; Devasena Inupakutika; Ian Sillitoe; Anil Thanki; Bruno Vieira; Jose M. Villaveces; Maria Victoria Schneider; Suzanna E. Lewis; Steve Pettifer; Burkhard Rost; Manuel Corpas

BioJS is an open source software project that develops visualization tools for different types of biological data. Here we report on the factors that influenced the growth of the BioJS user and developer community, and outline our strategy for building on this growth. The lessons we have learned on BioJS may also be relevant to other open source software projects. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.07009.001


Bioinformatics | 2011

Dasty3, a WEB framework for DAS

Jose M. Villaveces; Rafael C. Jimenez; Leyla Garcia; Gustavo A. Salazar; Bernat Gel; Nicola Mulder; María Martín; Alexander Garcia; Henning Hermjakob

Motivation: Dasty3 is a highly interactive and extensible Web-based framework. It provides a rich Application Programming Interface upon which it is possible to develop specialized clients capable of retrieving information from DAS sources as well as from data providers not using the DAS protocol. Dasty3 provides significant improvements on previous Web-based frameworks and is implemented using the 1.6 DAS specification. Availability: Dasty3 is an open-source tool freely available at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/dasty/ under the terms of the GNU General public license. Source and documentation can be found at http://code.google.com/p/dasty/. Contact: [email protected]


Bioinformatics | 2017

ProtVista: visualization of protein sequence annotations

Xavier Watkins; Leyla Garcia; Sangya Pundir; María Martín

Abstract Summary: ProtVista is a comprehensive visualization tool for the graphical representation of protein sequence features in the UniProt Knowledgebase, experimental proteomics and variation public datasets. The complexity and relationships in this wealth of data pose a challenge in interpretation. Integrative visualization approaches such as provided by ProtVista are thus essential for researchers to understand the data and, for instance, discover patterns affecting function and disease associations. Availability and Implementation: ProtVista is a JavaScript component released as an open source project under the Apache 2 License. Documentation and source code are available at http://ebi-uniprot.github.io/ProtVista/. Contact: [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Nature Precedings | 2010

Developing Ontologies within Decentralised Settings

Alexander Garcia; Kieran O’Neill; Leyla Garcia; Phillip Lord; Robert Stevens; Oscar Corcho; Frank Gibson

This chapter addresses two research questions: “How should a well-engineered methodology facilitate the development of ontologies within communities of practice?” and “What methodology should be used?” If ontologies are to be developed by communities then the ontology development life cycle should be better understood within this context. This chapter presents the Melting Point (MP), a proposed new methodology for developing ontologies within decentralised settings. It describes how MP was developed by taking best practices from other methodologies, provides details on recommended steps and recommended processes, and compares MP with alternatives. The methodology presented here is the product of direct first-hand experience and observation of biological communities of practice in which some of the authors have been involved. The Melting Point is a methodology engineered for decentralised communities of practice for which the designers of technology and the users may be the same group. As such, MP provides a potential foundation for the establishment of standard practices for ontology engineering.


F1000Research | 2017

Four simple recommendations to encourage best practices in research software

Rafael C. Jimenez; Mateusz Kuzak; Monther Alhamdoosh; Michelle Barker; Bérénice Batut; Mikael Borg; Salvador Capella-Gutierrez; Neil Chue Hong; Martin Cook; Manuel Corpas; Madison Flannery; Leyla Garcia; Josep Ll. Gelpí; Simon Gladman; Carole A. Goble; Montserrat González Ferreiro; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Philippa C. Griffin; Björn Grüning; Jonas Hagberg; Petr Holub; Rob W. W. Hooft; Jon Ison; Daniel S. Katz; Brane Leskošek; Federico López Gómez; Luis J. Oliveira; David Mellor; Rowland Mosbergen; Nicola Mulder

Scientific research relies on computer software, yet software is not always developed following practices that ensure its quality and sustainability. This manuscript does not aim to propose new software development best practices, but rather to provide simple recommendations that encourage the adoption of existing best practices. Software development best practices promote better quality software, and better quality software improves the reproducibility and reusability of research. These recommendations are designed around Open Source values, and provide practical suggestions that contribute to making research software and its source code more discoverable, reusable and transparent. This manuscript is aimed at developers, but also at organisations, projects, journals and funders that can increase the quality and sustainability of research software by encouraging the adoption of these recommendations.


F1000Research | 2014

FeatureViewer, a BioJS component for visualization of position-based annotations in protein sequences

Leyla Garcia; Guy Yachdav; Maria-Jesus Martin

Summary: FeatureViewer is a BioJS component that lays out, maps, orients, and renders position-based annotations for protein sequences. This component is highly flexible and customizable, allowing the presentation of annotations by rows, all centered, or distributed in non-overlapping tracks. It uses either lines or shapes for sites and rectangles for regions. The result is a powerful visualization tool that can be easily integrated into web applications as well as documents as it provides an export-to-image functionality. Availability: https://github.com/biojs/biojs/blob/master/src/main/javascript/Biojs.FeatureViewer.js; http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7719


PLOS ONE | 2012

MyDas, an Extensible Java DAS Server

Gustavo A. Salazar; Leyla Garcia; Philip Jones; Rafael C. Jimenez; Antony F. Quinn; Andrew M. Jenkinson; Nicola Mulder; María Martín; Sarah Hunter; Henning Hermjakob

A large number of diverse, complex, and distributed data resources are currently available in the Bioinformatics domain. The pace of discovery and the diversity of information means that centralised reference databases like UniProt and Ensembl cannot integrate all potentially relevant information sources. From a user perspective however, centralised access to all relevant information concerning a specific query is essential. The Distributed Annotation System (DAS) defines a communication protocol to exchange annotations on genomic and protein sequences; this standardisation enables clients to retrieve data from a myriad of sources, thus offering centralised access to end-users. We introduce MyDas, a web server that facilitates the publishing of biological annotations according to the DAS specification. It deals with the common functionality requirements of making data available, while also providing an extension mechanism in order to implement the specifics of data store interaction. MyDas allows the user to define where the required information is located along with its structure, and is then responsible for the communication protocol details.

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Rafael C. Jimenez

European Bioinformatics Institute

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María Martín

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Henning Hermjakob

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Ian Sillitoe

University College London

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