Free online reference management for clinicians and scientists
Recent "biomoby" articles
- These articles and links have been posted by Connotea users using the tag "biomoby".
- To add to this collection, or to start your own library:
Watch a short video (2m 41s)
Create a Connotea Community Page about this tag. 

Number of articles per page:
Briefings in Bioinformatics 10 (2), 114 (16 Jan 2009)
Facile and meaningful integration of data from disparate resources is the ‘holy grail’ of bioinformatics. Some resources have begun to address this problem by providing their data using Semantic Web standards, specifically the Resource Description Framework (RDF) and the Web Ontology Language (OWL). Unfortunately, adoption of Semantic Web standards has been slow overall, and even in cases where the standards are being utilized, interconnectivity between resources is rare. In response, we have seen the emergence of centralized ‘semantic warehouses’ that collect public data from third parties, integrate it, translate it into OWL/RDF and provide it to the community as a unified and queryable resource. One limitation of the warehouse approach is that queries are confined to the resources that have been selected for inclusion. A related problem, perhaps of greater concern, is that the majority of bioinformatics data exists in the ‘Deep Web’—that is, the data does not exist until an application or analytical tool is invoked, and therefore does not have a predictable Web address. The inability to utilize Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs) to address this data is a barrier to its accessibility via URI-centric Semantic Web technologies. Here we examine ‘The State of the Union’ for the adoption of Semantic Web standards in the health care and life sciences domain by key bioinformatics resources, explore the nature and connectivity of several community-driven semantic warehousing projects, and report on our own progress with the CardioSHARE/Moby-2 project, which aims to make the resources of the Deep Web transparently accessible through SPARQL queries.
Posted by mwilkinson (who is an author) and 3 others on Sat Jan 17 2009 at 15:13 UTC | info | related
Bioinformatics (Oxford, England) 22 (1), 106-11 (01 Jan 2006)
Bioinformatics (Oxford, England) 22 (7), 900-1 (01 Apr 2006)
Journal of Biomedical Informatics 41 (5), 837 (2008)
Researchers in the life-sciences are currently limited to small-scale informatics experiments and analyses because of the lack of interoperability among life-sciences web services. This limitation can be addressed by annotating services and their interfaces with semantic information, so that interoperability problems can be reasoned about programmatically. The Moby semantic web framework is a popular and mature platform that is used for this purpose. However, the number of services that are available to select from when building a workflow is becoming unmanageable for users. As such, attempts have been made to assist with service selection and composition. These tasks fall under the general label of automated service composition.
We present a prototype workflow assembly client that reduces the number of choices that users have to make by (1) restricting the overall set of services presented to them and (2) ranking services so that the the most desirable ones are presented first. We demonstrate via an evaluation of this prototype that a unification of relatively simple techniques can rank desirable services highly while maintaining interactive response times.
Posted by mwilkinson (who is an author) and 1 other on Wed Oct 01 2008 at 20:13 UTC | info | related
The generation challenge programme platform semantic standards and workbench for crop science
International journal of plant genomics 2008, 369601 (2008)
The Generation Challenge programme (GCP) is a global crop research consortium directed toward crop improvement through the application of comparative biology and genetic resources characterization to plant breeding. A key consortium research activity is the development of a GCP crop bioinformatics platform to support GCP research. This platform includes the following: (i) shared, public platform-independent domain models, ontology, and data formats to enable interoperability of data and analysis flows within the platform; (ii) web service and registry technologies to identify, share, and integrate information across diverse, globally dispersed data sources, as well as to access high-performance computational (HPC) facilities for computationally intensive, high-throughput analyses of project data; (iii) platform-specific middleware reference implementations of the domain model integrating a suite of public (largely open-access/-source) databases and software tools into a workbench to facilitate biodiversity analysis, comparative analysis of crop genomic data, and plant breeding decision making.
pantheon.generationcp.org
listing of ontologies relevant to crop research
Nature Reviews Genetics 9 (9), 678 (2008)
Briefings in bioinformatics 7 (3), 275-86 (09 Aug 2006)
The Semantic Web for the Life Sciences (SWLS), when realized, will dramatically improve our ability to conduct bioinformatics analyses using the vast and growing stores of web-accessible resources. This ability will be achieved through the widespread acceptance and application of standards for naming, representing, describing and accessing biological information. The W3C-led Semantic Web initiative has established most, if not all, of the standards and technologies needed to achieve a unified, global SWLS. Unfortunately, the bioinformatics community has, thus far, appeared reluctant to fully adopt them. Rather, we are seeing what could be described as ‘semantic creep’—timid, piecemeal and ad hoc adoption of parts of standards by groups that should be stridently taking a leadership role for the community. We suggest that, at this point, the primary hindrances to the creation of the SWLS may be social rather than technological in nature, and that, like the original Web, the establishment of the SWLS will depend primarily on the will and participation of its consumers.
Posted by mwilkinson (who is an author) and 11 others on Wed Aug 06 2008 at 19:40 UTC | info | related
Encyclopedia of Database Systems, Özsu, M. Tamer; Liu, Ling (Eds.), Springer, (2008)
localhost
Tagging a Test service in order to check my implementation of a taverna feature.
<< Prev 0 Showing entries 1 to 10 of 111 total Next 10 >>


