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Abstract Motivation: In silico experiments in bioinformatics involve the co-ordinated use of computational tools and information repositories. A growing number of these resources are being made available with programmatic access in the form of Web services. Bioinformatics scientists will need to orchestrate these Web services in workflows as part of their analyses. Results: The Taverna project has developed a tool for the composition and enactment of bioinformatics workflows for the life sciences community. The tool includes a workbench application which provides a graphical user interface for the composition of workflows. These workflows are written in a new language called the simple conceptual unified flow language (Scufl), where by each step within a workflow represents one atomic task. Two examples are used to illustrate the ease by which in silico experiments can be represented as Scufl workflows using the workbench application. Availability: The Taverna workflow system is available as open source and can be downloaded with example Scufl workflows from http://taverna.sourceforge.net
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Oinn et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a12029942f5651474d2095c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bth361
Tom Oinn
Research Organization of Information and Systems
Matthew Addis
The Ark
Justin Ferris
University of Southampton
Bioinformatics
University of Manchester
University of Southampton
University of Nottingham
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