Continued Development and Maintenance of the Systems Biology Workbench
University Of Washington, Seattle WA
Investigators
Linked publications, trials & patents
Abstract
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Quantitative analysis and simulation of cellular processes is becoming a useful and in an increasing number of cases, an indispensible tool for predictive biomedical research. In this proposal we aim to continue our work on biomedical computational standards together with further improvements to our simulation software infrastructure. Our work involves close collaboration with numerous colleagues in the United States and Europe particularly in relation to standards development. Over the last few years we have been heavily involved in efforts aimed at developing standards such as SBML (Model definition), SBGN (Graphical network representation) and MIASE/SED-ML (Simulation description). In addition we have provided software comparison tools to enable other developers to gauge their efforts against others and in the process helped improve software provision in the community. In this new proposal we highlight three areas of effort: 1) Continue to improve our infrastructure, particularly tutorials and documentation; 2) To propose and develop a simulation description standard; 2) Develop a bifurcation analysis suite. One of the most frustrating aspects of computational models is the difficulty in replicating simulations published by other researchers. We currently have the systems biology markup language (SBML) as the de facto standard model description format but we do not have any standard means to describe how a simulation should actually be carried out. There are tentative efforts to begin such a process and we propose to explore and develop such as standard in consultation with the community. Related to this we also intend to develop the necessary infrastructure and toolkits to enable authors and journal publishers to directly embed complete model descriptions of disease and biomedical processes in electronic published work, for example e-books and electronic journal articles. In practice we envisage a researcher viewing the document in a standard viewer and requesting all information required to model and replicate a particular graph by simply selecting the graph with the mouse. This would allow a researcher to reproduce a simulation with minimal effort. As a test of this effort we will develop a suite of bifurcation tools which we feel will be the most demanding test for a simulation description standard.
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