Literature DB >> 16515892

Granularity, scale and collectivity: when size does and does not matter.

Alan Rector1, Jeremy Rogers, Thomas Bittner.   

Abstract

Bridging levels of "granularity" and "scale" are frequently cited as key problems for biomedical informatics. However, detailed accounts of what is meant by these terms are sparse in the literature. We argue for distinguishing two notions: "size range," which deals with physical size, and "collectivity," which deals with aggregations of individuals into collections, which have emergent properties and effects. We further distinguish these notions from "specialisation," "degree of detail," "density," and "connectivity." We argue that the notion of "collectivity"--molecules in water, cells in tissues, people in crowds, stars in galaxies--has been neglected but is a key to representing biological notions, that it is a pervasive notion across size ranges--micro, macro, cosmological, etc.--and that it provides an account of a number of troublesome issues including the most important cases of when the biomedical notion of parthood is, or is not, best represented by a transitive relation. Although examples are taken from biomedicine, we believe these notions to have wider application.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16515892     DOI: 10.1016/j.jbi.2005.08.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomed Inform        ISSN: 1532-0464            Impact factor:   6.317


  21 in total

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8.  Alternative classification of identical concepts in different terminologies: Different ways to view the world.

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Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2019-05-07       Impact factor: 6.317

9.  Spatio-structural granularity of biological material entities.

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Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2010-05-28       Impact factor: 3.169

10.  The ontology of biological taxa.

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