|  | |
| Abbreviation | EMBL-ABR | 
|---|---|
| Formation | 2011[1] | 
| Location | |
| Director | Andrew Lonie | 
| Deputy Director | Vicky Schneider | 
| Parent organization | European Molecular Biology Laboratory | 
| Website | www | 
| Formerly called | Bioinformatics Resource Australia - EMBL (BRAEMBL) | 
The Australia Bioinformatics Resource (EMBL-ABR) (formerly the Bioinformatics Resource Australia - EMBL (BRAEMBL)) was a significant initiative under the associate membership to EMBL.
Since 2019, all activities carried out under EMBL-ABR have rolled over into the Bioplatforms Australia (NCRIS-funded) Australian BioCommons, under new funding agreements and led by Associate Professor Andrew Lonie.
EMBL-ABR aimed to:
- Increase Australia’s capacity to collect, integrate, analyse, exploit, share and archive the large heterogeneous data sets now part of modern life sciences research
- Contribute to the development of and provide training in data, tools and platforms to enable Australia’s life science researchers to undertake research in the age of big data
- Showcase Australian research and datasets at an international level
- Enable engagement in international programs that create, deploy and develop best practice approaches to data management, software tools and methods, computational platforms and bioinformatics services
EMBL-ABR was supported by Bioplatforms Australia and the University of Melbourne. EMBL-ABR Hub was hosted at the Victorian Life Sciences Computation Initiative (VLSCI) at the University of Melbourne.
In July 2016, EMBL-ABR announced an agreement to collaborate with GOBLET to develop training programs for bioinformatics.[2]
References
- ↑ "Annual Report Bioplatforms Australia 2013" (PDF). Retrieved 2 September 2016.
- ↑ "GOBLET agrees to collaborate with EMBL-ABR - EMBL-ABR". Retrieved 26 August 2016.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.