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. 2012 Jan;40(Database issue):D1250-4.
doi: 10.1093/nar/gkr1099. Epub 2011 Dec 1.

MetaBase--the wiki-database of biological databases

Affiliations

MetaBase--the wiki-database of biological databases

Dan M Bolser et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 2012 Jan.

Abstract

Biology is generating more data than ever. As a result, there is an ever increasing number of publicly available databases that analyse, integrate and summarize the available data, providing an invaluable resource for the biological community. As this trend continues, there is a pressing need to organize, catalogue and rate these resources, so that the information they contain can be most effectively exploited. MetaBase (MB) (http://MetaDatabase.Org) is a community-curated database containing more than 2000 commonly used biological databases. Each entry is structured using templates and can carry various user comments and annotations. Entries can be searched, listed, browsed or queried. The database was created using the same MediaWiki technology that powers Wikipedia, allowing users to contribute on many different levels. The initial release of MB was derived from the content of the 2007 Nucleic Acids Research (NAR) Database Issue. Since then, approximately 100 databases have been manually collected from the literature, and users have added information for over 240 databases. MB is synchronized annually with the static Molecular Biology Database Collection provided by NAR. To date, there have been 19 significant contributors to the project; each one is listed as an author here to highlight the community aspect of the project.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
The growth in the number of database publications per year. Each bar shows the number of research articles with the keyword ‘database’ appearing in the article title in the given year. The count only covers articles indexed in PubMed. The increase shows an exponential trend that will produce nearly 2000 database publications per year by 2015.

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