EPIC-CoGe Tutorial: Difference between revisions

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By having a user account, you will be able to:
By having a user account, you will be able to:
# add private data to CoGe
* Add private data to CoGe
# share private data with other users
* Share private data with other users
# create notebooks (collections of data -- experiments and genomes)
* Create notebooks (collections of data -- experiments and genomes)
# have CoGe track your analytical history (makes it easy to revisit old analyses)
* Have CoGe track your analytical history (makes it easy to revisit old analyses)


==Adding private data==
==Adding private data==

Revision as of 19:00, 29 May 2013

Overview

This tutorial is aimed at providing an introductory overview of new features in CoGe for the EPIC-CoGe system. These include:

  1. CoGe User accounts
  2. Adding private/restricted experiment data (in this case, epigenetic data)
  3. Creating Notebooks of collections of data
  4. Visualizing experimental data with CoGe's implementation of JBrowse
  5. Sharing data with collaborators

Each section has a brief overview of the process and a video on how to do it.


User accounts

The first thing you will want to do is get a CoGe user account. This is very easy:

  1. Register an iPlant account
  2. Log in

More details on how to get a CoGe account

By having a user account, you will be able to:

  • Add private data to CoGe
  • Share private data with other users
  • Create notebooks (collections of data -- experiments and genomes)
  • Have CoGe track your analytical history (makes it easy to revisit old analyses)

Adding private data

Once you have a CoGe account, you can add new data to CoGe. To do this:

  1. Go to your user profile (click on "My Profile" located in the menu at the top-right of any CoGe page)
  2. Click on the "Create" button to get a menu of things you can create
  3. Select:
    1. Load Genome: to load in fasta sequences for a genome
    2. Load Annotation: to add genome annotations in GFF to a previously loaded genome
    3. Load Experiment: to add quantitative data to an experiment