Chemical SciencesJekyll

chem-bla-ics

chem-bla-ics
Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses open science and computers to solve problems in chemistry, biochemistry and related fields.
Home PageJSON Feed
language
SolsticeAltmetricsOpencitationsChemical Sciences
Published

Hi all, welcome to this winter solstice challenge! Umm, to not give our southern hemisphere colleagues not a disadvantage, as their winter solstice has already passes, you’re up for a summer solstice challenge! Introduction So, you know ImpactStory and Altmetric.com (if not, browse my blog); these are wonderful tools to see what people are doing with your work.

ScholiaNanopubChemical Sciences
Published

It takes effort to move scholarly publishing forward. And the traditional publishers have not all shown to be good at that: we’re still basically stuck with machine-broken channels like PDFs and ReadCubes. They seem to all love text mining, but only if they can do it themselves. Fortunately, there are plenty of people who do like to make a difference and like to innovate. I find this important, because if we do not do it, who will.

WikidataChemistryBioclipseChemical Sciences
Published

Adding chemical compounds to Wikidata is not difficult. You can store the chemical formula (P274), (canonical) SMILES (P233), InChIKey (P235) (and InChI (P234), of course), as well various database identifiers (see what I wrote about that [here(http://chem-bla-ics.blogspot.nl/2015/12/new-edition-getting-cas-registry.html)]). It also allows storing of the provenance, and has predicates for that too.

Pra3006Chemical Sciences
Published

I previously wrote about the JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) which has become a de facto standard for sharing data by web services. I personally still prefer something using the Resource Description Framework (RDF) because of its clear link to ontologies, but perhaps JSON-LD combines the best of both worlds. The Open PHACTS API support various formats and this JSON is the default format used by the ops.js library.

Pra3006Chemical Sciences
Published

I think the authors of the Open PHACTS proposal made a right choice in defining a small set of questions that the solution to be developed could be tested against. The questions being specific, it is much easier to understand the needs. In fact, I suspect it may even be a very useful form of requirement analysis, and makes it hard to keep using vague terms. Open PHACTS has come up with 20 questions (doi:10.1016/j.drudis.2013.05.008;