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Userscripts for the life sciences.

BMC bioinformatics, Vol. 8, No. 1. (2007), 487.

X Abstract

BACKGROUND: The web has seen an explosion of chemistry and biology related resources in the last 15 years: thousands of scientific journals, databases, wikis, blogs and resources are available with a wide variety of types of information. There is a huge need to aggregate and organise this information. However, the sheer number of resources makes it unrealistic to link them all in a centralised manner. Instead, search engines to find information in those resources flourish, and formal languages like Resource Description Framework and Web Ontology Language are increasingly used to allow linking of resources. A recent development is the use of userscripts to change the appearance of web pages, by on-the-fly modification of the web content. This opens possibilities to aggregate information and computational results from different web resources into the web page of one of those resources. RESULTS: Several userscripts are presented that enrich biology and chemistry related web resources by incorporating or linking to other computational or data sources on the web. The scripts make use of Greasemonkey-like plugins for web browsers and are written in JavaScript. Information from third-party resources are extracted using open Application Programming Interfaces, while common Universal Resource Locator schemes are used to make deep links to related information in that external resource. The userscripts presented here use a variety of techniques and resources, and show the potential of such scripts. CONCLUSION: This paper discusses a number of userscripts that aggregate information from two or more web resources. Examples are shown that enrich web pages with information from other resources, and show how information from web pages can be used to link to, search, and process information in other resources. Due to the nature of userscripts, scientists are able to select those scripts they find useful on a daily basis, as the scripts run directly in their own web browser rather than on the web server. This flexibility allows the scientists to tune the features of web resources to optimise their productivity.

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This article has been bookmarked 23 times, initially on 2007-12-21.

2009-12-16 Group Journal picks
2009-10-22 User walshtp
2009-08-19 User inthemiddle , 1 note

firefox extensions are NOT firefox plug-ins

2009-08-19 15:25:20
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2008-09-14 Group Roswell Cancer Crosstalk , 1 note

An article profiling the useful "userscripts" out there for the researchers in lifesciences. Userscripts are little extensions that make research-and-reference-lives of students and researchers easier. For example, using a greasemonkey script for firefox (Greasemonkey: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/748 + Pubmed plugin: http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/2478), one can easily add pubmed abstracts and articles to one's citeULike library with one click.

2008-09-14 17:07:25
User Zephyrus , 1 note

An article profiling the useful "userscripts" out there for the researchers in lifesciences. Userscripts are little extensions that make research-and-reference-lives of students and researchers easier. For example, using a greasemonkey script for firefox (Greasemonkey: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/748 + Pubmed plugin: http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/2478), one can easily add pubmed abstracts and articles to one's citeULike library with one click.

2008-09-14 17:07:25
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