Difference between revisions of "Main Page"
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
This development wiki is used by Reactome team members for internal documentation that is not open to the public. If you feel that you either should have access or would like access to this Reactome Development Wiki, please contact us at [mailto:help@reactome.org help@reactome.org] | This development wiki is used by Reactome team members for internal documentation that is not open to the public. If you feel that you either should have access or would like access to this Reactome Development Wiki, please contact us at [mailto:help@reactome.org help@reactome.org] | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | |If you are interested in contributing to our public documentation efforts for users, authors and curators, please have a look at the public [http://wiki.reactome.org Reactome Wiki] | + | |If you are interested in contributing to our public documentation efforts for users, authors and curators, please have a look at the public [http://wiki.reactome.org Reactome Wiki]. We urge you to join the public documentation effort by registering as a ReactomeWiki user and setting up a personal account. ReactomeWiki members can use ReactomeWiki in ways that are not available to unregistered users. |
+ | Contribute to our documentation efforts! | ||
+ | Read more about user accounts at the Reactome wiki membership [[reactomewiki:Membership|page]]. Or just email the Reactome Team at [mailto:help@reactome.org help@reactome.org] if you have questions! | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 15:44, 6 March 2014
Welcome To The Reactome Development Wiki
Saturday, 28 December 2024
Reactome is an online bioinformatics database of human biology described in molecular terms. It is an on-line encyclopedia of core human pathways - DNA replication, transcription, translation, the cell cycle, metabolism, and signaling cascades - and can be browsed to retrieve up-to-date information about a topic of interest, e.g., the molecular details of the signaling cascade set off when the hormone insulin binds to its cell-surface receptor, or used as an analytical tool for the interpretation of large datasets like those generated by DNA microarray analysis. The information in Reactome is provided by expert biologists and gathered from the published research literature, is peer-reviewed before release on the Reactome website, and is periodically updated.
This is the Reactome Team's internal documentation site. It is not open to the public. If you are part of the Reactome group and need access to this site please email us here and we will get back to you shortly. Otherwise please have a look at our public wiki!
As of today the Reactome DevWiki houses 216 articles, using 1,775 pages, maintained by 131 users, who have edited these pages 20,550 times.
Reactome Wikis |
The Reactome team maintains two wikis. Those wikis are:
This development wiki is used by Reactome team members for internal documentation that is not open to the public. If you feel that you either should have access or would like access to this Reactome Development Wiki, please contact us at help@reactome.org |
If you are interested in contributing to our public documentation efforts for users, authors and curators, please have a look at the public Reactome Wiki. We urge you to join the public documentation effort by registering as a ReactomeWiki user and setting up a personal account. ReactomeWiki members can use ReactomeWiki in ways that are not available to unregistered users.
Contribute to our documentation efforts! Read more about user accounts at the Reactome wiki membership page. Or just email the Reactome Team at help@reactome.org if you have questions! |