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The Taverna workflow suite: designing and executing workflows of Web Services on the desktop, web or in the cloud
Author(s) -
Katherine Wolstencroft,
Robert Haines,
Donal Fellows,
Alan Williams,
David Withers,
Stuart Owen,
Stian SoilandReyes,
Ian Dunlop,
Aleksandra Nenadić,
Paul G. Fisher,
Jiten Bhagat,
Khalid Belhajjame,
Finn Bacall,
Alex Hardisty,
Abraham Nieva de la Hidalga,
Maria P. Balcazar Vargas,
Shoaib Sufi,
Carole Goble
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkt328
Subject(s) - workflow , suite , computer science , cloud computing , web service , workbench , world wide web , executable , cyberinfrastructure , data science , database , visualization , data mining , operating system , archaeology , history
The Taverna workflow tool suite (http://www.taverna.org.uk) is designed to combine distributed Web Services and/or local tools into complex analysis pipelines. These pipelines can be executed on local desktop machines or through larger infrastructure (such as supercomputers, Grids or cloud environments), using the Taverna Server. In bioinformatics, Taverna workflows are typically used in the areas of high-throughput omics analyses (for example, proteomics or transcriptomics), or for evidence gathering methods involving text mining or data mining. Through Taverna, scientists have access to several thousand different tools and resources that are freely available from a large range of life science institutions. Once constructed, the workflows are reusable, executable bioinformatics protocols that can be shared, reused and repurposed. A repository of public workflows is available at http://www.myexperiment.org. This article provides an update to the Taverna tool suite, highlighting new features and developments in the workbench and the Taverna Server.

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