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Cross-domain directory aggregating tools, AI models, datasets, and research resources from bio.tools, Bioconductor, HuggingFace, curated GitHub awesome-lists, and more.

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The FAO Statistics Team (NFISS) of Fisheries and Aquaculture Division collates world capture and aquaculture production statistics at either the species, genus, family, or higher taxonomic levels in 3,169 statistical categories (2022 data release) referred to as species items. ASFIS list of species includes 13,417 species items selected according to their interest or relation to fisheries and aquaculture. For each species item stored in a record, codes (ISSCAAP group, taxonomic and 3-alpha) and taxonomic information (scientific name, author(s), family, and higher taxonomic classification) are provided. An English name is available for most of the records, and about one third of them have also a French and Spanish name. Information is also provided about the availability of fishery production statistics on the species item in the FAO databases. (from homepage)

Functional annotations of genomes for studying gene regulation, with a primary focus on cis-regulatory elements (CREs) such as promoters and enhancers.

It is a simple ontology to describe sequence feature positions and regions as found in GFF3, DBBJ, EMBL, GenBank files, UniProt, and many other bioinformatics resources

A user of FAIRsharing

An organization in FAIRsharing, including universities, labs, etc.

A wikibase for linguistic knowledge

The FRBR-aligned Bibliographic Ontology (FaBiO) is an ontology for describing entities that are published or potentially publishable (e.g., journal articles, conference papers, books), and that contain or are referred to by bibliographic references.

An open, community-driven registry of conference and event venues. EVR assigns persistent identifiers (PIDs) to make referencing venues FAIR. This is similar to how ORCID assigns PIDs to researchers and ROR assigns PIDs to research organizations. This benefits researchers assembling information about in-person conferences and events by enabling them to refer in an unambiguous way to the venue where it takes place. This repository follows the [Open Data, Open Code, Open Infrastructure (O3) principles](https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-024-03406-w), meaning that the data and code are all in one repository that anyone can contribute to.

The EVORAO Ontology provides a structured and harmonized vocabulary for describing shareable pathogens as characterized biological materials, along with their derived products and associated services, organized into collections. Developed within the EVORA project, it supports consistent metadata annotation across research infrastructures, promoting findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability (FAIR). By aligning with relevant standards and ontologies, EVORAO facilitates cross-domain collaboration, integration, and sharing of pathogenic resources and services to enhance pandemic preparedness and response. While initially focused on virology, EVORAO is designed to be extensible and also supports metadata harmonization for other pathogens. [from repository]

EuroVoc is the EU's multilingual and multidisciplinary thesaurus. It contains keywords, organized in 21 domains and 127 sub-domains, which are used to describe the content of documents in EUR-Lex. [from homepage]

The Euvoc ontology, published by the Publications Office of the European Union, supports the development of authority tables (Name Authority Lists or NALs), Eurovoc and EU corporate datasets. It contains a set of classes and properties enabling all the information to be expressed in multilingual format. It helps define relationships between terms and concepts across multiple domains, supporting interoperability and standardization across European Union documentation and databases. It also defines a set a commonly use properties (i.e: start date, end dates, status), and supports the reusability on common data (currencies, languages, countries). The Euvoc ontology is maintained by the Publications Office of the European Union and disseminated on the EU Vocabularies website.

European Science Vocabulary (EuroSciVoc) is the taxonomy of fields of science based on OECD's 2015 Frascati Manual taxonomy. It was extended with fields of science categories extracted from CORDIS content through a semi-automatic process developed with Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques. (from homepage)

EuroFir (European Food Information Resource Network), the world-leading European Network of Excellence on Food Composition Databank systems, is a partnership between 48 universities, research institutes and small-to-medium sized enterprises (SMEs) from 25 European countries.

EUbOPEN is a project focusing on organizing chemogenic library collections, advancing chemical probe discovery, profiling bioactive compounds, and making project data more accessible.

Datasets published by the Publications Office of the European Union

A vocabulary of knowledge, skills and competences relevant to the European labour market. In ESCO v1.2.0, the skills pillar is structured in a hierarchy which contains the following four sub-classifications: 1) Knowledge, 2) Language skills and knowledge, 3) Skills, and 4) Transversal skills. [adapted from homepage]

The ESCO occupations pillar is built on ISCO-08 which serves as its hierarchical structure. ISCO-08 provides the top four levels for the occupations pillar and ESCO occupations are located at level 5 and lower. In ESCO, each occupation is mapped to exactly one ISCO-08 code. [from homepage]

The ontology of the taxonomy "European Skills, Competences, qualifications and Occupations". The ontology considers three ESCO pillars (or taxonomy) and 2 registers. The three pillars are: 1) Occupation, 2) Skill (and competences), and 3) Qualification

The European Skills, Competences, Qualifications and Occupations (ESCO) International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO).