This image was generated using AI. Ever wonder what a biological curator for ChEMBL does? Read on to find out what we were up to on a Monday , Tuesday , Wednesday , Thursday , and Friday in early June. A typical Friday in Emma’s week Fridays are usually meeting-free by design. This allows unbroken time to work deeply on tasks. Such tasks include focused curation, enhancements, or investigation into data quirks or errors. Occasionally, we’re also involved in training, data analysis, or drafting publications. On several recent Fridays, biological curators worked alongside other team members on our recent bioassay annotation paper , particularly in the generation of the gold-standard training set. Our biological curation role also extends to the annotation of the comprehensive drug data that can be found in ChEMBL. This means that we gain an insight into emerging modalities making their way through the clinical pipeline. To capture these entit...
This image was generated using AI. Ever wonder what a biological curator for ChEMBL does? Read on to find out what we were up to on a Monday , Tuesday , Wednesday , Thursday , and Friday in early June. A not-so-typical Wednesday & Thursday in Emma’s week The EMBL-EBI offers flexible working and part-time roles, this is part of what makes the working environment so inclusive. My part-time role (4 days/week) means that Wednesdays are usually a non-working day. However, a very special event brought me to the office on Wednesday 10th and Thursday 11th June. ChEMBL held our 2nd User Group Meeting where we welcomed over 60 delegates to our beautiful campus for two days of presentations, case studies, workshops, and networking. It’s rare that we get an opportunity for such close engagement with our community of database depositors and users in a single session, and the event provided an insight into the value of ChEMBL to the Medicinal Chemistry and wider co...