| URL: | https://jjj.bio.vu.nl |
| Full name: | Java Web Simulation |
| Description: | This repository of models, available to everyone with internet access, opens a whole new way in which we can make our models public. Via the database, a user can change enzyme parameters and run time simulations or steady state analyses. The interface is user friendly and no additional software is necessary. |
| Year founded: | 2002 |
| Last update: | |
| Version: | |
| Accessibility: |
Accessible
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| Country/Region: | Netherlands |
| Data type: | |
| Data object: | |
| Database category: | |
| Major species: | |
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| University/Institution: | VU University |
| Address: | Molecular Cell Physiology, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
| City: | Manchester |
| Province/State: | |
| Country/Region: | Netherlands |
| Contact name (PI/Team): | Jacky L. Snoep |
| Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): | jls@sun.ac.za |
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The JWS online simulation database. [PMID: 28130238]
Summary: JWS Online is a web-based platform for construction, simulation and exchange of models in standard formats. We have extended the platform with a database for curated simulation experiments that can be accessed directly via a URL, allowing one-click reproduction of published results. Users can modify the simulation experiments and export them in standard formats. The Simulation database thus lowers the bar on exploring computational models, helps users create valid simulation descriptions and improves the reproducibility of published simulation experiments. |
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Web-based kinetic modelling using JWS Online. [PMID: 15072998]
JWS Online is a repository of kinetic models, describing biological systems, which can be interactively run and interrogated over the Internet. It is implemented using a client-server strategy where the clients, in the form of web browser based Java applets, act as a graphical interface to the model servers, which perform the required numerical computations. |
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Java Web Simulation (JWS); a web based database of kinetic models. [PMID: 12241068]
Software to make a database of kinetic models accessible via the internet has been developed and a core database has been set up at http://jjj.biochem.sun.ac.za/. This repository of models, available to everyone with internet access, opens a whole new way in which we can make our models public. Via the database, a user can change enzyme parameters and run time simulations or steady state analyses. The interface is user friendly and no additional software is necessary. The database currently contains 10 models, but since the generation of the program code to include new models has largely been automated the addition of new models is straightforward and people are invited to submit their models to be included in the database. |