by Gesing, S, van Hemert, J, Kacsuk, P and Kohlbacher, O
Abstract:
The topic `Portals for life sciences' includes various research fields, on the one hand many different topics out of life sciences, e.g. mass spectrometry, on the other hand portal technologies and different aspects of computer science, such as usability of user interfaces and security of systems. The main aspect about portals is to simplify the user's interaction with computational resources that are concerted to a supported application domain.
Reference:
Special Issue: Portals for life sciences—Providing intuitive access to bioinformatic tools (Gesing, S, van Hemert, J, Kacsuk, P and Kohlbacher, O), In Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience, Wiley, volume 23, 2011.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{GHKK2010,
abstract = {The topic `Portals for life sciences' includes various research fields, on the one hand many different
topics out of life sciences, e.g. mass spectrometry, on the other hand portal technologies and different
aspects of computer science, such as usability of user interfaces and security of systems. The main aspect about portals is to simplify the user's interaction with computational resources that are concerted to a supported application domain.},
author = {Gesing, S and van Hemert, J and Kacsuk, P and Kohlbacher, O},
date-added = {2011-04-19 11:33:38 +0100},
date-modified = {2011-04-19 11:36:19 +0100},
journal = {Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience},
keywords = {e-Science; Portal},
pages = {223--34},
publisher = {Wiley},
title = {Special Issue: Portals for life sciences---Providing intuitive access to bioinformatic tools},
volume = {23},
year = {2011}}