EMMAWiki: Difference between revisions

From BRF-Software
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>VirginieMittard
No edit summary
imported>VirginieMittard
No edit summary
Line 20: Line 20:
* [[/DeveloperDocumentation|Developer Documentation]]
* [[/DeveloperDocumentation|Developer Documentation]]
** [[/DeveloperDocumentation/GettingStarted| GettingStarted]]
** [[/DeveloperDocumentation/GettingStarted| GettingStarted]]
** [[/DeveloperDocumentation/GettingStarted| APIDocumentation]]
* [[/AdministratorDocumentation|Administrator Documentation(Installation, project configuration and account management)]]
* [[/AdministratorDocumentation|Administrator Documentation(Installation, project configuration and account management)]]
** [[SoftwareRequirements| SoftwareRequirements]]
** [[SoftwareRequirements| SoftwareRequirements]]

Revision as of 13:24, 24 August 2005

EMMA 2 Overview Page

EMMA 2 - A MAGE-compliant system for storage and analysis of microarray data

EMMA 2 is a web-based system for management and analysis of transcriptomic data. EMMA 2 allows mapping of gene expression data onto proteome data or pathways and vice versa. It provides extensible analysis and visualization Plug-Ins via the R-language. EMMA 2 now supports the MAGE-ML XML-language for the interchange of microarray data. With EMMA you can do normalization of single and multiple microarrays and run statistical tests for inferring differrentially expressed genes. You can also run cluster analysis to find co-regulated genes.

Please have a look at the EMMA website for general information.

Documentation

General

Other Issues

EMMA 2 is a free software and is distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPL). For more information about project setup, license, demo project, guided tour, workshops and PDF documentation, please go to the EMMA website.

Contact

Please send

/!\ Please never send passwords or other confidential information to mailing lists

Developers


File:EMMAWiki$emma cartoon by dkoch.png Cartoon by Daniel Koch, 2004


Copyright (C) 2004, Center for Biotechnology, Bielefeld University

Author: Michael Dondrup