CellML and SBML are XML-based languages for storage and exchange of molecular biological and physiological reaction models. They use very similar subsets of MathML to specify the mathematical aspects of the models. CellML2SBML is implemented as a suite of XSLT stylesheets that, when applied consecutively, convert models expressed in CellML into SBML without significant loss of information. The converter is based on the most recent stable versions of the languages (CellML version 1.1; SBML Level 2 Version 1), and the XSLT used in the stylesheets adheres to the XSLT version 1.0 specification. Of all 306 models in the CellML repository in April 2005, CellML2SBML converted 91% automatically into SBML. Minor manual changes to the unit definition...
SBML is a machine-readable model representation language for software tools in computational systems...
The XML-based Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) has emerged as a standard for storage, communi...
SBML was designed in 2000, merely 2 years after the first official specification of XML. 11 years af...
“This is a pre-copy-editing, author produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Bioinform...
MathSBML is an open-source, freely-downloadable Mathematica package that facilitates working with Sy...
The Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) is a machine-readable model representation language for s...
MathSBML is an open-source, freely-downloadable Mathematica package that facilitates working with Sy...
Computational models can help researchers to interpret data, understand biological functions, and ma...
The Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) is an XML-based format for representing mathematical mode...
Summary: MathSBML is a Mathematica package designed for manipulating Systems Biology Markup Languag...
In-silico simulation of chemical reactions is playing an increasingly important rôle in furthering u...
peer reviewed[en] MOTIVATION: CellDesigner is a well-established biological map editor used in many ...
Computational models can help researchers to interpret data, understand biological functions, and ma...
With the rise of Systems Biology as a new paradigm for understanding biological processes, the devel...
We present here CellML 2.0, an XML-based language for describing and exchanging mathematical models ...
SBML is a machine-readable model representation language for software tools in computational systems...
The XML-based Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) has emerged as a standard for storage, communi...
SBML was designed in 2000, merely 2 years after the first official specification of XML. 11 years af...
“This is a pre-copy-editing, author produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Bioinform...
MathSBML is an open-source, freely-downloadable Mathematica package that facilitates working with Sy...
The Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) is a machine-readable model representation language for s...
MathSBML is an open-source, freely-downloadable Mathematica package that facilitates working with Sy...
Computational models can help researchers to interpret data, understand biological functions, and ma...
The Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) is an XML-based format for representing mathematical mode...
Summary: MathSBML is a Mathematica package designed for manipulating Systems Biology Markup Languag...
In-silico simulation of chemical reactions is playing an increasingly important rôle in furthering u...
peer reviewed[en] MOTIVATION: CellDesigner is a well-established biological map editor used in many ...
Computational models can help researchers to interpret data, understand biological functions, and ma...
With the rise of Systems Biology as a new paradigm for understanding biological processes, the devel...
We present here CellML 2.0, an XML-based language for describing and exchanging mathematical models ...
SBML is a machine-readable model representation language for software tools in computational systems...
The XML-based Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) has emerged as a standard for storage, communi...
SBML was designed in 2000, merely 2 years after the first official specification of XML. 11 years af...