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The eagle-i network (or just eagle-i) was a tool developed by a set of institutions from the United States that enables users to locate scientific resources around their country. It was retired November 4, 2021 after more than a decade in service. It used an ontology to map the resources (such as scientific equipment) to their location, facilitating reuse and collaboration.[1] The eagle-i team has produced ontologies that take care of different kinds of resources, such as the Reagent Application Ontology. [2]
External links
edit- [https://open.catalyst.harvard.edu/products/eagle-i/ eagle-i info page
- https://www.eagle-i.net/ - former web site
References
edit- ^ Vasilevsky, N.; Johnson, T.; Corday, K.; Torniai, C.; Brush, M.; Segerdell, E.; Wilson, M.; Shaffer, C.; Robinson, D.; Haendel, M. (2012-03-20). "Research resources: curating the new eagle-i discovery system". Database. 2012: bar067. doi:10.1093/database/bar067. ISSN 1758-0463. PMC 3308157. PMID 22434835.
- ^ Brush, Matthew H.; Vasilevsky, Nicole; Torniai, Carlo; Johnson, Tenille; Shaffer, Christopher; Haendel, Melissa (2011). "Developing a reagent application ontology within the OBO foundry framework". CEUR Workshop Proceedings: 234–236.