Help : Help Preparing Data for Publication
Contents
This help document contains guidelines for making microarray data
accessible on the web for SMD users who are ready for submit a
manuscript for publication. Please note that it is a strict policy
that any data resident in SMD that is used in a publication MUST be
made publicly accessible through SMD.
To cite SMD in a paper, please cite:
Gollub J, Ball CA, Binkley G, Demeter J, Finkelstein DB, Hebert JM,
Hernandez-Boussard T, Jin H, Kaloper M, Matese JC, Schroeder M, Brown
PO, Botstein D, Sherlock G. The Stanford Microarray Database: data
access and quality assessment tools. Nucleic Acids Res. 2003
Jan 1;31(1):94-6.
Full
text  |  PubMed
Our previous publication was:
Sherlock G, Hernandez-Boussard T, Kasarskis A, Binkley G, Matese JC, Dwight SS, Kaloper M, Weng S, Jin H, Ball CA, Eisen MB, Spellman PT, Brown PO, Botstein D, Cherry JM.
The Stanford Microarray Database. Nucleic Acids Res 2001 Jan
1;29(1):152-5.
Full text pdf  |  PubMed
If you want to refer to a URL for SMD, please use:
http://smd.stanford.edu/
Note: Using a different url, such as
http://genome-www5.stanford.edu/ is NOT a good idea, as
we cannot guarantee that this url will always work.
There are a couple of possibilities:
- You can make the web-site on your own and you can host it on your own.
- You can make the web-site on your own and you can ask us to
host it. If you choose this, please let us know well ahead of time by sending e-mail to array@genome.stanford.edu.
- Ask SMD ahead of time to help you with making one. Usually, given the amount of work that this entails, the curator who creates the website expects collaborative consideration. Please send an e-mail to array@genome.stanford.edu.
The experiments you wish to publish need to be combined into an experiment set and the permissions on the set need to be changed, so they would be available publicly. There is help available about how to create experiment sets: Creating Experiment Sets
Data in SMD can change. There are a number of reasons why this could happen, eg. data can be renormalized; the mapping of DNA on the arrays to the genes they represent can be dynamic, as can the annotation of those genes; godlist problems can be found and fixed. While these changes enhance the utility of data stored in SMD, they will also make it impossible to repeat an analysis as it was done originally at a later time.
It is the authors responsibility to make sure an analysis can always be repeated and verified in the future. To ensure this, static versions of your raw and processed data - the way it was used in the publication - need to be both:
- available on the web-site,
- archived on CD in your lab!
Even if you made your own web-site, we still need to know
about the publication. Let us know when the paper is published, so
we can associate the reference with your microarray expression
data: array@genome.stanford.edu.
To let SMD know about an upcoming publication, you should create
the relevant experiment
sets, and email array@genome.stanford.edu
with the details of those sets, and the details of the in press
paper (also let us know if you have an additional web supplement
to accompany your paper). Then send us a subsequent email when the
paper is actually published, and we will take care of making the
data public.
Please note that if you would like to make your data fully
available to reveiwers prior to publication, without making it
available to the whole world (a reasonable, and indeed good
thing), then please send us email. We will then
create a reviewer account, and grant it privileges to see the
experiment sets that you are using to support the publication.
Send comments and questions to: array@genome.stanford.edu