Difference between revisions of "Template:Article of the week"

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<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Day 253 - West Midlands Police - Forensic Science Lab (7969822920).jpg|240px]]</div>
<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Phanerozoic Biodiversity.png|240px]]</div>
'''The [[American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors/Laboratory Accreditation Board]]''' ('''ASCLD/LAB''') is a Missouri-based not-for-profit that "offers voluntary accreditation to public and private crime laboratories" around the world.
'''[[Biodiversity informatics]]''' is the application of informatics techniques to biodiversity [[information]] for improved management, presentation, discovery, exploration, and analysis. It typically builds on a foundation of taxonomic, biogeographic, and synecologic information stored in digital form, which, with the application of modern computer techniques, can yield new ways to view and analyze existing information, as well as predictive models for information that does not yet exist. Biodiversity informatics has also been described by others as "the creation, integration, analysis, and understanding of information regarding biological diversity" and a field of science "that brings information science and technologies to bear on the data and information generated by the study of organisms, their genes, and their interactions."


The main objectives of the ASCLD/LAB are:
According to correspondence reproduced by Walter Berendsohn, the term "biodiversity informatics" was coined by John Whiting in 1992 to cover the activities of an entity known as the Canadian Biodiversity Informatics Consortium (CBIC), a group involved with fusing basic biodiversity information with environmental economics and geospatial information. Subsequently it appears to have lost at least some connection with the geospatial world, becoming more closely associated with the computerized management of biodiversity information. ('''[[Biodiversity informatics|Full article...]]''')<br />
 
- to improve the quality of laboratory services provided to the criminal justice system.
 
- to adopt, develop and maintain criteria which may be used by a laboratory to assess its level of performance and to strengthen its operation.
 
- to provide an independent, impartial, and objective system by which laboratories can benefit from a total operational review.
 
- to offer to the general public and to users of laboratory services a means of identifying those laboratories which have demonstrated that they meet established standards. ('''[[The American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors/Laboratory Accreditation Board|Full article...]]''')<br />


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''Recently featured'': [[Environmental informatics]], [[Application programming interface]], [[Immunoinformatics]]
''Recently featured'': [[American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors/Laboratory Accreditation Board]], [[Environmental informatics]], [[Application programming interface]]

Revision as of 17:56, 15 June 2015

Phanerozoic Biodiversity.png

Biodiversity informatics is the application of informatics techniques to biodiversity information for improved management, presentation, discovery, exploration, and analysis. It typically builds on a foundation of taxonomic, biogeographic, and synecologic information stored in digital form, which, with the application of modern computer techniques, can yield new ways to view and analyze existing information, as well as predictive models for information that does not yet exist. Biodiversity informatics has also been described by others as "the creation, integration, analysis, and understanding of information regarding biological diversity" and a field of science "that brings information science and technologies to bear on the data and information generated by the study of organisms, their genes, and their interactions."

According to correspondence reproduced by Walter Berendsohn, the term "biodiversity informatics" was coined by John Whiting in 1992 to cover the activities of an entity known as the Canadian Biodiversity Informatics Consortium (CBIC), a group involved with fusing basic biodiversity information with environmental economics and geospatial information. Subsequently it appears to have lost at least some connection with the geospatial world, becoming more closely associated with the computerized management of biodiversity information. (Full article...)


Recently featured: American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors/Laboratory Accreditation Board, Environmental informatics, Application programming interface