Literature DB >> 19151099

Moby and Moby 2: creatures of the deep (web).

Ben P Vandervalk1, E Luke McCarthy, Mark D Wilkinson.   

Abstract

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.

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19151099     DOI: 10.1093/bib/bbn051

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brief Bioinform        ISSN: 1467-5463            Impact factor:   11.622


  9 in total

1.  MASCP Gator: an aggregation portal for the visualization of Arabidopsis proteomics data.

Authors:  Hiren J Joshi; Matthias Hirsch-Hoffmann; Katja Baerenfaller; Wilhelm Gruissem; Sacha Baginsky; Robert Schmidt; Waltraud X Schulze; Qi Sun; Klaas J van Wijk; Volker Egelhofer; Stefanie Wienkoop; Wolfram Weckwerth; Christophe Bruley; Norbert Rolland; Tetsuro Toyoda; Hirofumi Nakagami; Alexandra M Jones; Steven P Briggs; Ian Castleden; Sandra K Tanz; A Harvey Millar; Joshua L Heazlewood
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2010-11-12       Impact factor: 8.340

2.  S3QL: a distributed domain specific language for controlled semantic integration of life sciences data.

Authors:  Helena F Deus; Miriã C Correa; Romesh Stanislaus; Maria Miragaia; Wolfgang Maass; Hermínia de Lencastre; Ronan Fox; Jonas S Almeida
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2011-07-14       Impact factor: 3.169

3.  Exposing the cancer genome atlas as a SPARQL endpoint.

Authors:  Helena F Deus; Diogo F Veiga; Pablo R Freire; John N Weinstein; Gordon B Mills; Jonas S Almeida
Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 6.317

4.  A lightweight, flow-based toolkit for parallel and distributed bioinformatics pipelines.

Authors:  Marcin Cieślik; Cameron Mura
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2011-02-25       Impact factor: 3.307

5.  TogoWS: integrated SOAP and REST APIs for interoperable bioinformatics Web services.

Authors:  Toshiaki Katayama; Mitsuteru Nakao; Toshihisa Takagi
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2010-05-14       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  The 2nd DBCLS BioHackathon: interoperable bioinformatics Web services for integrated applications.

Authors:  Toshiaki Katayama; Mark D Wilkinson; Rutger Vos; Takeshi Kawashima; Shuichi Kawashima; Mitsuteru Nakao; Yasunori Yamamoto; Hong-Woo Chun; Atsuko Yamaguchi; Shin Kawano; Jan Aerts; Kiyoko F Aoki-Kinoshita; Kazuharu Arakawa; Bruno Aranda; Raoul Jp Bonnal; José M Fernández; Takatomo Fujisawa; Paul Mk Gordon; Naohisa Goto; Syed Haider; Todd Harris; Takashi Hatakeyama; Isaac Ho; Masumi Itoh; Arek Kasprzyk; Nobuhiro Kido; Young-Joo Kim; Akira R Kinjo; Fumikazu Konishi; Yulia Kovarskaya; Greg von Kuster; Alberto Labarga; Vachiranee Limviphuvadh; Luke McCarthy; Yasukazu Nakamura; Yunsun Nam; Kozo Nishida; Kunihiro Nishimura; Tatsuya Nishizawa; Soichi Ogishima; Tom Oinn; Shinobu Okamoto; Shujiro Okuda; Keiichiro Ono; Kazuki Oshita; Keun-Joon Park; Nicholas Putnam; Martin Senger; Jessica Severin; Yasumasa Shigemoto; Hideaki Sugawara; James Taylor; Oswaldo Trelles; Chisato Yamasaki; Riu Yamashita; Noriyuki Satoh; Toshihisa Takagi
Journal:  J Biomed Semantics       Date:  2011-08-02

7.  Using semantic web technologies to annotate and align microarray designs.

Authors:  Sebastian Szpakowski; James McCusker; Michael Krauthammer
Journal:  Cancer Inform       Date:  2009-05-13

8.  bioGUID: resolving, discovering, and minting identifiers for biodiversity informatics.

Authors:  Roderic D M Page
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2009-11-10       Impact factor: 3.169

9.  Phylotastic! Making tree-of-life knowledge accessible, reusable and convenient.

Authors:  Arlin Stoltzfus; Hilmar Lapp; Naim Matasci; Helena Deus; Brian Sidlauskas; Christian M Zmasek; Gaurav Vaidya; Enrico Pontelli; Karen Cranston; Rutger Vos; Campbell O Webb; Luke J Harmon; Megan Pirrung; Brian O'Meara; Matthew W Pennell; Siavash Mirarab; Michael S Rosenberg; James P Balhoff; Holly M Bik; Tracy A Heath; Peter E Midford; Joseph W Brown; Emily Jane McTavish; Jeet Sukumaran; Mark Westneat; Michael E Alfaro; Aaron Steele; Greg Jordan
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2013-05-13       Impact factor: 3.169

  9 in total

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