@article{1618, keywords = {Animals, Humans, Gene Expression Profiling, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Computer Graphics, Software, Databases, Genetic, Information Storage and Retrieval, California, Quality Control}, author = {Jeremy Gollub and Catherine Ball and Gail Binkley and Janos Demeter and David Finkelstein and Joan Hebert and Tina Hernandez-Boussard and Heng Jin and Miroslava Kaloper and John Matese and Mark Schroeder and Patrick Brown and David Botstein and Gavin Sherlock}, title = {The Stanford Microarray Database: data access and quality assessment tools.}, abstract = {
The Stanford Microarray Database (SMD; http://genome-www.stanford.edu/microarray/) serves as a microarray research database for Stanford investigators and their collaborators. In addition, SMD functions as a resource for the entire scientific community, by making freely available all of its source code and providing full public access to data published by SMD users, along with many tools to explore and analyze those data. SMD currently provides public access to data from 3500 microarrays, including data from 85 publications, and this total is increasing rapidly. In this article, we describe some of SMD{\textquoteright}s newer tools for accessing public data, assessing data quality and for data analysis.
}, year = {2003}, journal = {Nucleic Acids Res}, volume = {31}, pages = {94-6}, month = {01/2003}, language = {eng}, }