User:Eric Martz
From Proteopedia
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*[[Nucleosomes (Emartz)]] which was copied into [[Nucleosomes]]. | *[[Nucleosomes (Emartz)]] which was copied into [[Nucleosomes]]. | ||
*[[Proton Channels]] includes an animated morph. | *[[Proton Channels]] includes an animated morph. | ||
| + | *[[Morphs]] '''NEEDS WORK''' | ||
Revision as of 18:59, 23 March 2008
Contents |
Eric Martz
Professor Emeritus, University of Massachusetts, Amherst MA USA
emartz at microbio dot umass dot edu
martz.molviz.org
Some Proteopedia Pages to Which I've Contributed
- Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I
- Nucleosomes (Emartz) which was copied into Nucleosomes.
- Proton Channels includes an animated morph.
- Morphs NEEDS WORK
Workshops
- One-day courses in molecular visualization and structural bioinformatics for researchers and educators.
Principal Author or Architect of (Elsewhere):
- FirstGlance in Jmol, a general-purpose molecular visualization tool which has been adopted by Nature (see the 3D View links), the ConSurf Server, and other journals and structural bioinformatics servers. 2005-present.
- Visualization for the the ConSurf Server developed by Nir Ben-Tal, Fabian Glaser, Elana Erez and others, which colors amino acids by evolutionary conservation, completely automatically. 2002-present.
- Top Five 3D Molecular Visualization Technologies for the Rest Of Us.
- MolviZ.Org with tutorials in Jmol and molecular visualization resources for educators and students. Included is a DNA Structure Tutorial started in 1996, and now (in collaboration with Angel Herráez) available in 5 languages.
- World Index of Molecular Visualization Resources. 2000-present.
- Atlas of Macromolecules. 2002-present.
- With Jaime Prilusky, the PDB Lite search interface for students and beginners to find published macromolecular models. 1998-present.
- An incomplete History of Macromolecular Visualization which includes a list of the earliest macromolecules solved by X-ray crystallography. 1997-present.
- molvis-list, founded in 1995 as the RasMol List. Maintained largely by Tim Driscoll/molvisions.com since 2004.
And in an earlier era
- Protein Explorer 1998-present.
- The RasMol Home Page founded 1996.
