Difference between revisions of "Template:Article of the week"

From LIMSWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Updated article of the week.)
(Updated article of the week text)
 
(420 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Keck Bioimaging Lab.jpg|240px]]</div>
<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Fig1 Huang iScience2022 25-8.jpg|240px]]</div>
'''[[Bioimage informatics]]''' is a multidisciplinary sub-field of [[bioinformatics]] and computational biology that involves the development and use of computational techniques to analyze bioimages, especially cellular and molecular images, on a large scale fashion, with the goal of mining useful knowledge out of complicated and heterogeneous images and related metadata.
'''"[[Journal:Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform|Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform]]"'''


The field of bioimage informatics is somewhat related to [[Imaging informatics|medical imaging informatics]], in so much as some of the advances in that field have found their way to the technology of analyzing bioimages. However, "it is very challenging to directly apply existing medical image analysis methods to ... bioimage informatics problems." Some of the challenges bioimages pose to researchers include the difficulty of analyzing at the cellular and molecular scales, the large size of the files, and the amount of time required to manually analyze the files. These challenges require automatic high-throughput analysis techniques, novel algorithms, and advanced systems to deal with the tasks of processing, storing, visualizing, and mining bioimages. ('''[[Bioimage informatics|Full article...]]''')<br />
One of the top priorities in any [[laboratory]] is [[Archival informatics|archiving]] experimental data in the most secure, efficient, and errorless way. It is especially important to those in chemical and biological research, for it is more likely to damage experiment records. In addition, the transmission of experiment results from paper to electronic devices is time-consuming and redundant. Therefore, we introduce an [[Open-source software|open-source]] no-code [[electronic laboratory notebook]] (ELN), Elegancy, a [[Cloud computing|cloud-based]]/standalone web service distributed as a Docker image. Elegancy fits all laboratories but is specially equipped with several features benefitting biochemical laboratories. It can be accessed via various web browsers, allowing researchers to upload photos or audio recordings directly from their mobile devices. Elegancy also contains a meeting arrangement module, audit/revision control, and laboratory supply management system. We believe Elegancy could help the scientific research community gather evidence, share information, reorganize knowledge, and digitize laboratory works with greater ease and security ... ('''[[Journal:Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform|Full article...]]''')<br />
<br />
<br />
''Recently featured'': [[Biobank]], [[Translational research]], [[Rural health clinic]]
''Recently featured'':
{{flowlist |
* [[Journal:Implementing an institution-wide electronic laboratory notebook initiative|Implementing an institution-wide electronic laboratory notebook initiative]]
* [[Journal:Quality and environmental management systems as business tools to enhance ESG performance: A cross-regional empirical study|Quality and environmental management systems as business tools to enhance ESG performance: A cross-regional empirical study]]
* [[Journal:PIKAChU: A Python-based informatics kit for analyzing chemical units|PIKAChU: A Python-based informatics kit for analyzing chemical units]]
}}

Latest revision as of 17:08, 10 April 2023

Fig1 Huang iScience2022 25-8.jpg

"Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform"

One of the top priorities in any laboratory is archiving experimental data in the most secure, efficient, and errorless way. It is especially important to those in chemical and biological research, for it is more likely to damage experiment records. In addition, the transmission of experiment results from paper to electronic devices is time-consuming and redundant. Therefore, we introduce an open-source no-code electronic laboratory notebook (ELN), Elegancy, a cloud-based/standalone web service distributed as a Docker image. Elegancy fits all laboratories but is specially equipped with several features benefitting biochemical laboratories. It can be accessed via various web browsers, allowing researchers to upload photos or audio recordings directly from their mobile devices. Elegancy also contains a meeting arrangement module, audit/revision control, and laboratory supply management system. We believe Elegancy could help the scientific research community gather evidence, share information, reorganize knowledge, and digitize laboratory works with greater ease and security ... (Full article...)

Recently featured: