Hill Mark Anthony
Anatomy, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW, Australia.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2018 Jun;301(6):998-1003. doi: 10.1002/ar.23783. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
The Kyoto embryo collection was begun in 1961 by Dr. Hideo Nishimura. The collection has been continuously developed and currently contains over 44,000 human normal and abnormal specimens. Beginning online in 1997, the internet provided an opportunity to make embryos from the collection widely available for research and educational purposes (http://tiny.cc/Embryo). These embryonic development resources have been continuously published and available from that time until today. Published in Japanese as an Atlas of Embryonic Development. Published online as the Kyoto Human Embryo Visualization Project (http://atlas.cac.med.kyoto-u.ac.jp) and also as the Human Embryo Atlas (http://tiny.cc/Human_Embryo_Atlas). Published now electronically as a digital eBook (http://tiny.cc/Kyoto_Collection_eBook). This new digital format allows incorporation of whole embryo and histology manipulable images, labels, and a linked glossary. New imaging modalities of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and episcopic fluorescence image capture (EFIC) can also be easily displayed as animations. For research, the collection specimens and histological sections have been extensively studied and published in several hundred papers, discussed here and elsewhere in this special edition. I will also describe how the Kyoto collection will now form a major partner of a new international embryology research group, the Digital Embryology Consortium (https://human-embryology.org). The digital Kyoto collection will be made available for remote researcher access, analysis, and comparison with other collections allowing new research and educational applications. This work was presented at the 40th Anniversary Commemoration Symposium of the Congenital Anomaly Research Center, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Japan, November, 2015. Anat Rec, 301:998-1003, 2018. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
京都胚胎库由西村秀夫博士于1961年创建。该库不断发展壮大,目前包含超过44000份人类正常和异常标本。从1997年开始上线,互联网为将库中的胚胎广泛用于研究和教育目的提供了契机(http://tiny.cc/Embryo)。这些胚胎发育资源从那时起持续发布并一直可供使用至今。以日文出版了《胚胎发育图谱》。在线发布为京都人类胚胎可视化项目(http://atlas.cac.med.kyoto-u.ac.jp)以及人类胚胎图谱(http://tiny.cc/Human_Embryo_Atlas)。现在以数字电子书形式发布(http://tiny.cc/Kyoto_Collection_eBook)。这种新的数字格式允许纳入整个胚胎和组织学可操作图像、标签以及链接词汇表。磁共振成像(MRI)和光学切片荧光图像采集(EFIC)等新的成像方式也能轻松以动画形式展示。对于研究而言,该库的标本和组织学切片已得到广泛研究,并发表在数百篇论文中,在本特刊及其他地方进行了讨论。我还将描述京都库现在如何成为一个新的国际胚胎学研究组织——数字胚胎学联盟(https://human-embryology.org)的主要合作伙伴。数字化的京都库将可供远程研究人员访问、分析并与其他库进行比较,从而实现新的研究和教育应用。这项工作在2015年11月于日本京都大学医学研究生院先天性异常研究中心举行的第40周年纪念研讨会上进行了展示。《解剖学记录》,301:998 - 1003,2018年。© 2018威利期刊公司