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classifeye

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List of commits on branch master.
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efdc8597a85c17a145cac12dbd38aea262716d8b

Added comment to ipad link in readme

committed 13 years ago
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f9634da9b88c9cafa244c2c2312b058e29f41676

Changed image tags in readme so images all the same size:

committed 13 years ago
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380ba604df4d5acf51d74d1363c244e96cfbae1d

Changed some simple wording in the readme

committed 13 years ago
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07435645fecfb8033bd7f596405c183d47df4469

Added a more comprehensive readme of the project overall

committed 13 years ago
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81b5cb5f9a7014067f3c30134d1589c7efbc3162

Added a test commit to see if GFN pulling/updating works ok

committed 13 years ago
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b928a0d90adee99d6ff5ef63c9b42ee81a2895e5

Added an empty readme

committed 13 years ago

README

The README file for this repository.

What is Classifeye?

Classifeye is the product of a Good For Nothing hack day alongside Cancer Research UK and Citizen Science Alliance

Simply put, can we find a way to accelerate the work being done by scientists to analyse these samples in order to identify positive treatments.

Think of it as 2 scientists spending 2 weeks in a lab, or 50 members of the public spending just 5 minutes on the tube one day. Mindblowing.

How does it work?

The basic idea is to take tumour micro array spots like this:

TMA Spot

Split them down into small high resolution samples like this:

Section of TMA Spot

Adjust the images to make them easier for the general public to read/classify like this:

Adjusted Section of TMA Spot

Then ask the public some questions about the sample. Their responses can then be used in huge-scale aggregate form to provide statistically meaningful data.

How Far Did You Get?

So far we have explored

  • Desktop
    • Web App using sliders for classification
    • Web app using buttons for classification
  • Mobile
    • iPhone/Android HTML App
  • Tablet
    • iPad Web App which can be found here (Looks good on iPads and pretty bad on everything else. There's only so much you can do in 2 days...)

What's next?

The next steps will be to take everything we learned from hacking something together in 48 hours, extract the positives and build something solid and scalable with slightly more care and attention than the original 48 hours allowed!

We would love it if Cancer Research, Good For Nothing and Citizen Science wanted to take this forward. Trust me when I say that we really do get that passionate about this kind of thing all the time, especially in this case and given what's at stake, if you want this, we will make it happen.