Difference between revisions of "Home of the SEED"

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With the growing number of available genomes, the need for an environment to support effective comparative analysis increases. The original SEED Project was started by the [http://thefig.info Fellowship of Interpretation of Genomes (FIG)] as an open source effort.  Argonne National Lab and the University of Chicago joined the project, and now much of the activity occurs at those two institutions (as well as the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Hope college, San Diego State University, the Burnham Institute and a number of other institutions).  The cooperative effort focuses on the development of the annotation environment called the SEED and, more importantly, on the development of curated genomic data.  
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With the growing number of available genomes, the need for an environment to support effective comparative analysis increases. The original SEED Project was started by the [http://thefig.info Fellowship for Interpretation of Genomes (FIG)] as a largely unfunded open source effort in 2003.  Argonne National Lab and the University of Chicago joined the project, and now much of the activity occurs at those two institutions (as well as the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Hope college, San Diego State University, the Burnham Institute and a number of other institutions).  The cooperative effort focuses on the development of the comperative genomics environment called the SEED and, more importantly, on the development of curated genomic data.  
  
We provide a public [http://seed-viewer.theseed.org/FIG/index.cgi  SEED-Viewer] that allows read-only access to the latest data and annotations. For users interested in editing and learning how to use the system, we also provide a [http://theseed.uchicago.edu/FIG/index.cgi Trial-SEED]. As described in our [[Annotating_1000_genomes|manifesto]] the [[Glossary#Annotation|annotation]] is not performed on a gene by gene basis per genome, but rather by [[Glossary#Subsystem|subsystem]] by an expert curator across many genomes at a time.  
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We provide a [http://seed-viewer.theseed.org/FIG/index.cgi  SEED-Viewer] that allows read-only access to the latest curated data sets. For users interested in editing and learning how to use the system, we provide the [http://theseed.uchicago.edu/FIG/index.cgi Trial-SEED]. As described in our [[Annotating_1000_genomes|manifesto]] the [[Glossary#Annotation|annotation]] is not performed on a gene by gene basis per genome, but rather by [[Glossary#Subsystem|subsystem]] by an expert curator across many genomes at a time.  
  
  

Revision as of 17:27, 1 November 2006

With the growing number of available genomes, the need for an environment to support effective comparative analysis increases. The original SEED Project was started by the Fellowship for Interpretation of Genomes (FIG) as a largely unfunded open source effort in 2003. Argonne National Lab and the University of Chicago joined the project, and now much of the activity occurs at those two institutions (as well as the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Hope college, San Diego State University, the Burnham Institute and a number of other institutions). The cooperative effort focuses on the development of the comperative genomics environment called the SEED and, more importantly, on the development of curated genomic data.

We provide a SEED-Viewer that allows read-only access to the latest curated data sets. For users interested in editing and learning how to use the system, we provide the Trial-SEED. As described in our manifesto the annotation is not performed on a gene by gene basis per genome, but rather by subsystem by an expert curator across many genomes at a time.


We make all our software and data available for download and use on our DownloadPage page.