AgeAnnoMO Week 4

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Contents

AgeAnnoMo

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General information about the database

What is the name of the database? (link to the home page)

AgeAnnoMo https://relab.xidian.edu.cn/AgeAnnoMO/#/

What type (or types) of database is it?

AgeAnnoMO is a Multi Omics Database for animal aging.

What biological information (type of data) does it contain? (sequence, structure, model organism, or specialty [what?])

It contains age-related genes, proteins, metabolites, mitochondrial genes, microbiota and age-specific TCR and BCR sequences relating to aging for 50 different species.

What type of data source does it have?

Secondary data from other databases such as PubMed and Google Scholar

primary versus secondary ("meta")?

It is secondary since they collected the data from previous studies

curated versus non-curated?

Curated

if curated, is it electronic versus human curation?

Human curation because they picked the species and the datasets

if human curation, is it in-house staff versus community curation?

This databases is curated by in house staff, not community curation.

What individual or organization maintains the database?

Public versus private?

AgeAnnoMO is a database available to the public.

large national or multinational entity or small lab group

Multinational entity with contributors being UT health, West China School of Medicine, Xidian University.

What is their funding source(s)?

Scientific quality of the database:

Does the content appear to completely cover its content domain?

*How many records does the database contain?

136 aging datasets. Do I include 50 species, samples, cells, etc?

What claims do the database owners make about coverage in the corresponding paper?

What species are covered in the database? (If it is a very long list, summarize.)

Is the database content useful? I.e., what biological questions can it be used to answer?

Is the database content timely?

Is there a need in the scientific community for such a database at this time?

Is the content covered by other databases already?

How current is the database?

When did the database first go online?

How often is the database updated?

When was the last update?

General utility of the database to the scientific community

Are there links to other databases? Which ones?

Is it convenient to browse the data?

Is it convenient to download the data?

In what file formats are the data provided?

What type of files, indicated by the file extension (e.g., .txt, .xml., etc.)?

Are they standard or non-standard formats? (i.e., are they following an approved standard for that type of data)?

Evaluate the “user-friendliness” of the database: can a naive user quickly navigate the website and gather useful information?

Is the website well-organized?

Does it have a help section or tutorial?

Are the search options sensible?

Run a sample query. Do the results make sense?

Access: Is there a license agreement or any restrictions on access to the database?

Summary judgment:

Would you direct a colleague unfamiliar with the field to use it?

Is this a professional or "hobby" database? The "hobby" analogy means that it was that person's hobby to make the database. It could mean that it is limited in scope, done by one or a few persons, or seems amateur.