What is the acceptable data format?
You can easily upload data files to NextBio representing processed raw data – results of statistical analysis consisting of genes/proteins or custom IDs and associated statistics (in text, csv or excel file formats). NextBio enables users to import standard statistical columns (fold change, p-value, score, rank, correlation) and custom columns with numbers and any user-defined titles (a maximum of 5 columns). The Gene identifier column should be in the left-most column or should have the header “Gene name” to be recognized (see example below). The minimum requirement is that your file contains a list of recognizable identifiers (e.g., a set of genes). For experimental data, we strongly recommend to include associated statistics in order to improve the quality of the correlation to data within NextBio. You can import individual files by adding them one by one, or you can zip them into a single file for easier upload. Acceptable formats include text, csv and Excel. We currently do not su
You can easily upload data files to NextBio representing processed raw data – results of statistical analysis consisting of genes/proteins or custom IDs and associated statistics (in text, csv or excel file formats). NextBio enables users to import standard statistical columns (fold change, p-value, score, rank, correlation) and custom columns with numbers and any user-defined titles (a maximum of 5 columns). The Gene identifier column should be in the left-most column or should have the header “Gene name” to be recognized (see example below). The minimum requirement is that your file contains a list of recognizable identifiers (e.g., a set of genes). For experimental data, we strongly recommend to include associated statistics in order to improve the quality of the correlation to data within NextBio. You can import individual files by adding them one by one, or you can zip them into a single file for easier upload. Accetable formats include text, csv and Excel. We currently do not sup