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Australia Bioinformatics Resource

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australia Bioinformatics Resource
AbbreviationEMBL-ABR
Formation2011[1]
Location
Director
Andrew Lonie
Deputy Director
Vicky Schneider
Parent organization
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Websitewww.embl-abr.org.au
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:

  1. Increase Australia’s capacity to collect, integrate, analyse, exploit, share and archive the large heterogeneous data sets now part of modern life sciences research
  2. 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
  3. Showcase Australian research and datasets at an international level
  4. 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.[citation needed]

In July 2016, EMBL-ABR announced an agreement to collaborate with GOBLET to develop training programs for bioinformatics.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Annual Report Bioplatforms Australia 2013" (PDF). Retrieved 2 September 2016.
  2. ^ "GOBLET agrees to collaborate with EMBL-ABR - EMBL-ABR". Retrieved 26 August 2016.