Archive for June 26th, 2009

The ChemBL blog is an excellent read and if you’re interested in “Open Access Drug Discovery And Medicinal Chemistry Data ” this is one for you. We are shamelessly, and WITH permission, taking some of the blogposts about New Drug Approvals and adding them into the descriptions on ChemSpider. Some examples are here and here. To date for all cases where we have added the description the compound itself was already on ChemSpider and with the correct name. That’s good news based on some of our subjective measures of coverage for the database.

The Spectral Game at www.spectralgame.com is powered by chemical structures and spectra from ChemSpider. A provisional form of our manuscript regarding this paper is now online at the Journal of Cheminformatics here:

The Spectral Game: leveraging Open Data and crowdsourcing for education

Jean-Claude Bradley , Robert J Lancashire , Andrew SID Lang and Antony J Williams

Journal of Cheminformatics 2009, 1:9doi:10.1186/1758-2946-1-9

 
Published: 26 June 2009

Abstract (provisional)

We report on the implementation of the Spectral Game, a web-based game where players try to match molecules to various forms of interactive spectra including 1D/2D NMR, Mass Spectrometry and Infrared spectra. Each correct selection earns the player one point and play continues until the player supplies an incorrect answer. The game is usually played using a web browser interface, although a version has been developed in the virtual 3D environment of Second Life. Spectra uploaded as Open Data to ChemSpider in JCAMP-DX format are used for the problem sets together with structures extracted from the website. The spectra are displayed using JSpecView, an Open Source spectrum viewing applet which affords zooming and integration. The application of the game to the teaching of proton NMR spectroscopy in an undergraduate organic chemistry class and a 2D Spectrum Viewer are also presented.