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5 content providers found

Keywords: Biodiversity data  or Climate projections   or High Performance Computing  or accelerating research  or data visualisation 


  • Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC)

    The Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) enables the Australian research community and...

    61 training material
    10 upcoming event (141 past event)
    Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) https://dresa.org.au/content_providers/australian-research-data-commons-ardc The Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) enables the Australian research community and industry access to nationally significant, data intensive digital research infrastructure, platforms, skills and collections of high quality data. As a national research infrastructure provider, the ARDC facilitates partnerships to develop a coherent research environment that enables researchers to find, access, contribute to and effectively use services to maximise research quality and impact. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/001/original/ARDC_Docusign_logo_-_296_x_76px_.png?1627455958
  • Heurist Network

    ### What is Heurist? Heurist is a comprehensive, flexible data management service built...

    1 training material
    0 upcoming event (15 past event)
    Heurist Network https://dresa.org.au/content_providers/heurist-network ### What is Heurist? Heurist is a comprehensive, flexible data management service built specifically for the Humanities, available both as a free service, or for download to a private server (open source). Its development has been driven and informed by dozens of Humanities research projects. Heurist is a human-centered interface to a MySQL (or other SQL server) database. It operates as a hybrid relational / graph database, hiding all the complexity of SQL, tables, relational joins, relational integrity etc. behind (fairly) simple choices. It’s available on a number of non-commercial web services (free to use) and on private web servers. You can also install it on your own server if you wish. ### What we offer We offer frequent training and collquia for our users, indeed for all Humanities researchers who use digital methods and require a database. Our users are a diverse community of researchers across Australasia, Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas. We also offer one-on-one support and ad-hoc training for projects who use our technology, or individuals who need a hand gettings started with Humanities databasing. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/018/original/h6logo_intro.png?1653544233
  • EcoCommons

    A Planet RDC project, EcoCommons is building a collaborative commons that is developing...

    8 training material
    EcoCommons https://dresa.org.au/content_providers/ecocommons A Planet RDC project, EcoCommons is building a collaborative commons that is developing ecological modelling tools. It currently provides; access to point-and-click species distribution modelling (SDM) tools, projections of how those distributions might change as the climate warms, access to a variety of spatial data grids (rasters), and API connection to records from the Atlas of Living Australia. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/034/original/ecocommons-logo.png?1711521620
  • Sonika Tyagi Lab

    Our expertise is in implementing Bioinformatics methods and machine learning models to solve...

    0 upcoming event (2 past event)
    Sonika Tyagi Lab https://dresa.org.au/content_providers/sonika-tyagi-lab Our expertise is in implementing Bioinformatics methods and machine learning models to solve biological research and clinical outcome questions. The two research focus areas for the group are: (1) Multimodal data integration for personalised medicine and (2) Integrative Genomics. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/027/original/DF0_7341.JPG?1693372847
  • Atlas of Living Australia

    The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) is a collaborative, digital, open infrastructure that pulls...

    0 upcoming event (1 past event)
    Atlas of Living Australia https://dresa.org.au/content_providers/atlas-of-living-australia The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) is a collaborative, digital, open infrastructure that pulls together Australian biodiversity data from multiple sources, making it accessible and reusable. The ALA helps to create a more detailed picture of Australia’s biodiversity for scientists, policymakers, environmental planners and land managers, industry and the general public and enables them to work more efficiently. The ALA is the Australian node and a full voting member of GBIF – the Global Biodiversity Information Facility – an international network and data infrastructure funded by the world’s governments and aimed at providing anyone, anywhere, open access to data about all types of life on Earth. /system/content_providers/images/000/000/017/original/ALA_Logo_Inline_CMYK.jpg?1652413583