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EMAP and EMAGE: a framework for understanding spatially organized data

Authors :
Peter Stevenson
Allyson Ross
Richard Baldock
Jianguo Rao
Matthew H. Kaufman
Andrew M. Waterhouse
James Sharpe
Bill Hill
Yiya Yang
Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman
Derek Houghton
Albert Burger
Jonathan Bard
Duncan Davidson
Jeffrey H. Christiansen
Nick Burton
Guangjie Feng
Source :
Neuroinformatics. 1(4)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

The Edinburgh MouseAtlas Project (EMAP) is a time-series of mouse-embryo volumetric models. The models provide a context-free spatial framework onto which structural interpretations and experimental data can be mapped. This enables collation, comparison, and query of complex spatial patterns with respect to each other and with respect to known or hypothesized structure. The atlas also includes a time-dependent anatomical ontology and mapping between the ontology and the spatial models in the form of delineated anatomical regions or tissues. The models provide a natural, graphical context for browsing and visualizing complex data. The Edinburgh Mouse Atlas Gene-Expression Database (EMAGE) is one of the first applications of the EMAP framework and provides a spatially mapped gene-expression database with associated tools for data mapping, submission, and query. In this article, we describe the underlying principles of the Atlas and the gene-expression database, and provide a practical introduction to the use of the EMAP and EMAGE tools, including use of new techniques for whole body gene-expression data capture and mapping.

Details

ISSN :
15392791
Volume :
1
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuroinformatics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b50461aab011b12d62900df7fb45862b