Eagle-i explained
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
Notes and References
- 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. 10.1093/database/bar067. 22434835. 3308157. 1758-0463. free.
- Brush. Matthew H.. Vasilevsky. Nicole. Torniai. Carlo. Johnson. Tenille. Shaffer. Christopher. Haendel. Melissa. Melissa Haendel . 2011. Developing a reagent application ontology within the OBO foundry framework. CEUR Workshop Proceedings. 234–236.