409 research outputs found
Regulating the financial analysis industry : Is the European Directive effective ?
In the recent years, the US and the EC have witnessed the adoption of new regulations focused on financial analysts. This study investigates whether the European regulations, known as the Market Abuse Directive (MAD) changed the distribution of recommendations and increased their credibility...financial analysts ; conflicts of interest ; recommendations ; Market Abuse Directive; European Union
Selected papers from the 15th Annual Bio-Ontologies special interest group meeting
© 2013 Soldatova et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Over the 15 years, the Bio-Ontologies SIG at ISMB has provided a forum for discussion of the latest and most innovative research in the bio-ontologies development, its applications to biomedicine and more generally the organisation, presentation and dissemination of knowledge in biomedicine and the life sciences. The seven papers and the commentary selected for this supplement span a wide range of topics including: web-based querying over multiple ontologies, integration of data, annotating patent records, NCBO Web services, ontology developments for probabilistic reasoning and for physiological processes, and analysis of the progress of annotation and structural GO changes
Selected papers from the 16th Annual Bio-Ontologies Special Interest Group Meeting
Copyright @ 2014 Soldatova et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver
(http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.Over the 16 years, the Bio-Ontologies SIG at ISMB has provided a forum for vibrant discussions of the latest and most innovative advances in the research area of bio-ontologies, its applications to biomedicine and more generally in the organisation, sharing and re-use of knowledge in biomedicine and the life sciences. The six papers selected for this supplement span a wide range of topics including: ontology-based data integration, ontology-based annotation of scientific literature, ontology and data model development, representation of scientific results and gene candidate prediction
Cloudy, increasingly FAIR; Revisiting the FAIR Data guiding principles for the European Open Science Cloud
The FAIR Data Principles propose that all scholarly output should be Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable. As a set of guiding principles, expressing only the kinds of behaviours that researchers should expect from contemporary data resources, how the FAIR principles should manifest in reality was largely open to interpretation. As support for the Principles has spread, so has the breadth of these interpretations. In observing this creeping spread of interpretation, several of the original authors felt it was now appropriate to revisit the Principles, to clarify both what FAIRness is, and is not
Reuse of design pattern measurements for health data
Research using health data is challenged by its heterogeneous nature, description and storage. The COVID-19 outbreak made clear that rapid analysis of observations such as clinical measurements across a large number of healthcare providers can have enormous health benefits. This has brought into focus the need for a common model of quantitative health data that enables data exchange and federated computational analysis. The application of ontologies, Semantic Web technologies and the FAIR principles is an approach used by different life science research projects, such as the European Joint Programme on Rare Diseases, to make data and metadata machine readable and thereby reduce the barriers for data sharing and analytics and harness health data for discovery. Here, we show the reuse of a pattern for measurements to model diverse health data, to demonstrate and raise visibility of the usefulness of this pattern for biomedical research
Provenance-Centered Dataset of Drug-Drug Interactions
Over the years several studies have demonstrated the ability to identify
potential drug-drug interactions via data mining from the literature (MEDLINE),
electronic health records, public databases (Drugbank), etc. While each one of
these approaches is properly statistically validated, they do not take into
consideration the overlap between them as one of their decision making
variables. In this paper we present LInked Drug-Drug Interactions (LIDDI), a
public nanopublication-based RDF dataset with trusty URIs that encompasses some
of the most cited prediction methods and sources to provide researchers a
resource for leveraging the work of others into their prediction methods. As
one of the main issues to overcome the usage of external resources is their
mappings between drug names and identifiers used, we also provide the set of
mappings we curated to be able to compare the multiple sources we aggregate in
our dataset.Comment: In Proceedings of the 14th International Semantic Web Conference
(ISWC) 201
Towards an interoperable information infrastructure providing decision support for genomic medicine
Genetic dispositions play a major role in individual disease risk and
treatment response. Genomic medicine, in which medical decisions are refined by
genetic information of particular patients, is becoming increasingly important.
Here we describe our work and future visions around the creation of a
distributed infrastructure for pharmacogenetic data and medical decision
support, based on industry standards such as the Web Ontology Language (OWL)
and the Arden Syntax
The emergence and evolution of the research fronts in HIV/AIDS research
In this paper, we have identified and analyzed the emergence, structure and
dynamics of the paradigmatic research fronts that established the fundamentals
of the biomedical knowledge on HIV/AIDS. A search of papers with the
identifiers "HIV/AIDS", "Human Immunodeficiency Virus", "HIV-1" and "Acquired
Immunodeficiency Syndrome" in the Web of Science (Thomson Reuters), was carried
out. A citation network of those papers was constructed. Then, a sub-network of
the papers with the highest number of inter-citations (with a minimal in-degree
of 28) was selected to perform a combination of network clustering and text
mining to identify the paradigmatic research fronts and analyze their dynamics.
Thirteen research fronts were identified in this sub-network. The biggest and
oldest front is related to the clinical knowledge on the disease in the
patient. Nine of the fronts are related to the study of specific molecular
structures and mechanisms and two of these fronts are related to the
development of drugs. The rest of the fronts are related to the study of the
disease at the cellular level. Interestingly, the emergence of these fronts
occurred in successive "waves" over the time which suggest a transition in the
paradigmatic focus. The emergence and evolution of the biomedical fronts in
HIV/AIDS research is explained not just by the partition of the problem in
elements and interactions leading to increasingly specialized communities, but
also by changes in the technological context of this health problem and the
dramatic changes in the epidemiological reality of HIV/AIDS that occurred
between 1993 and 1995
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