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New developments in delivering public access to data from the National Center for Computational Toxicology at the EPA
Researchers at EPA’s National Center for
Computational Toxicology integrate advances in biology, chemistry, and computer
science to examine the toxicity of chemicals and help prioritize chemicals for
further research based on potential human health risks. The goal of this
research program is to quickly evaluate thousands of chemicals, but at a much
reduced cost and shorter time frame relative to traditional approaches. The data generated by the Center includes
characterization of thousands of chemicals across hundreds of high-throughput
screening assays, consumer use and production information, pharmacokinetic
properties, literature data, physical-chemical properties as well as the
predictive computational modeling of toxicity and exposure. We have developed a
number of databases and applications to deliver the data to the public,
academic community, industry stakeholders, and regulators. This presentation will
provide an overview of our work to develop an architecture that integrates
diverse large-scale data from the chemical and biological domains, our
approaches to disseminate these data, and the delivery of models supporting
predictive computational toxicology. In particular, this presentation will
review our new CompTox Chemistry Dashboard and the developing architecture to
support real-time property and toxicity endpoint prediction. This abstract does not reflect U.S. EPA
policy.