41,654 research outputs found
Ontology-based knowledge representation of experiment metadata in biological data mining
According to the PubMed resource from the U.S. National Library of Medicine,
over 750,000 scientific articles have been published in the ~5000 biomedical journals
worldwide in the year 2007 alone. The vast majority of these publications include results from hypothesis-driven experimentation in overlapping biomedical research domains. Unfortunately, the sheer volume of information being generated by the biomedical research enterprise has made it virtually impossible for investigators to stay aware of the latest findings in their domain of interest, let alone to be able to assimilate and mine data from related investigations for purposes of meta-analysis. While computers have the potential for assisting investigators in the extraction, management and analysis of these data, information contained in the traditional journal publication is still largely unstructured, free-text descriptions of study design, experimental application and results interpretation, making it difficult for computers to gain access to the content of what is being conveyed without significant manual intervention. In order to circumvent these roadblocks and make the most of the output from the biomedical research enterprise, a variety of related standards in knowledge representation are being developed, proposed and adopted in the biomedical community. In this chapter, we will explore the current status of efforts to develop minimum information standards for the representation of a biomedical experiment, ontologies composed of shared vocabularies assembled into subsumption hierarchical structures, and extensible relational data models that link the information components together in a machine-readable and human-useable framework for data mining purposes
Semantic processing of EHR data for clinical research
There is a growing need to semantically process and integrate clinical data
from different sources for clinical research. This paper presents an approach
to integrate EHRs from heterogeneous resources and generate integrated data in
different data formats or semantics to support various clinical research
applications. The proposed approach builds semantic data virtualization layers
on top of data sources, which generate data in the requested semantics or
formats on demand. This approach avoids upfront dumping to and synchronizing of
the data with various representations. Data from different EHR systems are
first mapped to RDF data with source semantics, and then converted to
representations with harmonized domain semantics where domain ontologies and
terminologies are used to improve reusability. It is also possible to further
convert data to application semantics and store the converted results in
clinical research databases, e.g. i2b2, OMOP, to support different clinical
research settings. Semantic conversions between different representations are
explicitly expressed using N3 rules and executed by an N3 Reasoner (EYE), which
can also generate proofs of the conversion processes. The solution presented in
this paper has been applied to real-world applications that process large scale
EHR data.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Biomedical Informatics, 2015,
preprint versio
An automated identification and analysis of ontological terms in gastrointestinal diseases and nutrition-related literature provides useful insights
With an unprecedented growth in the biomedical literature, keeping up to date with
the new developments presents an immense challenge. Publications are often studied
in isolation of the established literature, with interpretation being subjective and
often introducing human bias. With ontology-driven annotation of biomedical data
gaining popularity in recent years and online databases offering metatags with rich
textual information, it is now possible to automatically text-mine ontological terms
and complement the laborious task of manual management, interpretation, and
analysis of the accumulated literature with downstream statistical analysis. In this
paper, we have formulated an automated workflow through which we have identified
ontological information, including nutrition-related terms in PubMed abstracts
(from 1991 to 2016) for two main types of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases: Crohn’s
Disease and Ulcerative Colitis; and two other gastrointestinal (GI) diseases, namely,
Coeliac Disease and Irritable Bowel Syndrome. Our analysis reveals unique clustering
patterns as well as spatial and temporal trends inherent to the considered GI diseases
in terms of literature that has been accumulated so far. Although automated
interpretation cannot replace human judgement, the developed workflow shows
promising results and can be a useful tool in systematic literature reviews. The
workflow is available at https://github.com/KociOrges/pytag
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Proceedings ICPW'07: 2nd International Conference on the Pragmatic Web, 22-23 Oct. 2007, Tilburg: NL
Proceedings ICPW'07: 2nd International Conference on the Pragmatic Web, 22-23 Oct. 2007, Tilburg: N
The Role of Definitions in Biomedical Concept Representation
The Foundational Model (FM) of anatomy, developed as an anatomical enhancement of UMLS, classifies anatomical entities in a structural context. Explicit definitions have played a critical role in the establishment of FM classes. Essential structural properties that distinguish a group of anatomical entities serve as the differentiae for defining classes. These, as well as other structural attributes, are introduced as template slots in Protege, a frame-based knowledge acquisition system, and are inherited by descendants of the class. A set of desiderata has evolved during the instantiation of the FM for formulating definitions. We contend that 1. these desiderata generalize to non-anatomical domains and 2. satisfying them in constituent vocabularies of UMLS would enhance the quality of information retrievable through UMLS
Mapping gene associations in human mitochondria using clinical disease phenotypes
Nuclear genes encode most mitochondrial proteins, and their mutations cause diverse and debilitating clinical disorders. To date, 1,200 of these mitochondrial genes have been recorded, while no standardized catalog exists of the associated clinical phenotypes. Such a catalog would be useful to develop methods to analyze human phenotypic data, to determine genotype-phenotype relations among many genes and diseases, and to support the clinical diagnosis of mitochondrial disorders. Here we establish a clinical phenotype catalog of 174 mitochondrial disease genes and study associations of diseases and genes. Phenotypic features such as clinical signs and symptoms were manually annotated from full-text medical articles and classified based on the hierarchical MeSH ontology. This classification of phenotypic features of each gene allowed for the comparison of diseases between different genes. In turn, we were then able to measure the phenotypic associations of disease genes for which we calculated a quantitative value that is based on their shared phenotypic features. The results showed that genes sharing more similar phenotypes have a stronger tendency for functional interactions, proving the usefulness of phenotype similarity values in disease gene network analysis. We then constructed a functional network of mitochondrial genes and discovered a higher connectivity for non-disease than for disease genes, and a tendency of disease genes to interact with each other. Utilizing these differences, we propose 168 candidate genes that resemble the characteristic interaction patterns of mitochondrial disease genes. Through their network associations, the candidates are further prioritized for the study of specific disorders such as optic neuropathies and Parkinson disease. Most mitochondrial disease phenotypes involve several clinical categories including neurologic, metabolic, and gastrointestinal disorders, which might indicate the effects of gene defects within the mitochondrial system. The accompanying knowledgebase (http://www.mitophenome.org/) supports the study of clinical diseases and associated genes
Interoperability and FAIRness through a novel combination of Web technologies
Data in the life sciences are extremely diverse and are stored in a broad spectrum of repositories ranging from those designed for particular data types (such as KEGG for pathway data or UniProt for protein data) to those that are general-purpose (such as FigShare, Zenodo, Dataverse or EUDAT). These data have widely different levels of sensitivity and security considerations. For example, clinical observations about genetic mutations in patients are highly sensitive, while observations of species diversity are generally not. The lack of uniformity in data models from one repository to another, and in the richness and availability of metadata descriptions, makes integration and analysis of these data a manual, time-consuming task with no scalability. Here we explore a set of resource-oriented Web design patterns for data discovery, accessibility, transformation, and integration that can be implemented by any general- or special-purpose repository as a means to assist users in finding and reusing their data holdings. We show that by using off-the-shelf technologies, interoperability can be achieved atthe level of an individual spreadsheet cell. We note that the behaviours of this architecture compare favourably to the desiderata defined by the FAIR Data Principles, and can therefore represent an exemplar implementation of those principles. The proposed interoperability design patterns may be used to improve discovery and integration of both new and legacy data, maximizing the utility of all scholarly outputs
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