Literature DB >> 25700173

Reasoning over taxonomic change: exploring alignments for the Perelleschus use case.

Nico M Franz1, Mingmin Chen2, Shizhuo Yu2, Parisa Kianmajd2, Shawn Bowers3, Bertram Ludäscher2.   

Abstract

Classifications and phylogenetic inferences of organismal groups change in light of new insights. Over time these changes can result in an imperfect tracking of taxonomic perspectives through the re-/use of Code-compliant or informal names. To mitigate these limitations, we introduce a novel approach for aligning taxonomies through the interaction of human experts and logic reasoners. We explore the performance of this approach with the Perelleschus use case of Franz & Cardona-Duque (2013). The use case includes six taxonomies published from 1936 to 2013, 54 taxonomic concepts (i.e., circumscriptions of names individuated according to their respective source publications), and 75 expert-asserted Region Connection Calculus articulations (e.g., congruence, proper inclusion, overlap, or exclusion). An Open Source reasoning toolkit is used to analyze 13 paired Perelleschus taxonomy alignments under heterogeneous constraints and interpretations. The reasoning workflow optimizes the logical consistency and expressiveness of the input and infers the set of maximally informative relations among the entailed taxonomic concepts. The latter are then used to produce merge visualizations that represent all congruent and non-congruent taxonomic elements among the aligned input trees. In this small use case with 6-53 input concepts per alignment, the information gained through the reasoning process is on average one order of magnitude greater than in the input. The approach offers scalable solutions for tracking provenance among succeeding taxonomic perspectives that may have differential biases in naming conventions, phylogenetic resolution, ingroup and outgroup sampling, or ostensive (member-referencing) versus intensional (property-referencing) concepts and articulations.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25700173      PMCID: PMC4336294          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118247

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  24 in total

1.  Species or supraspecific taxa as terminals in cladistic analysis? Groundplans versus exemplars revisited.

Authors:  L Prendini
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2001-04       Impact factor: 15.683

2.  Time to change how we describe biodiversity.

Authors:  Andrew R Deans; Matthew J Yoder; James P Balhoff
Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol       Date:  2011-12-19       Impact factor: 17.712

3.  Names are key to the big new biology.

Authors:  D J Patterson; J Cooper; P M Kirk; R L Pyle; D P Remsen
Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol       Date:  2010-10-18       Impact factor: 17.712

4.  The availability of research data declines rapidly with article age.

Authors:  Timothy H Vines; Arianne Y K Albert; Rose L Andrew; Florence Débarre; Dan G Bock; Michelle T Franklin; Kimberly J Gilbert; Jean-Sébastien Moore; Sébastien Renaut; Diana J Rennison
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2013-12-19       Impact factor: 10.834

5.  The application of species criteria in avian taxonomy and its implications for the debate over species concepts.

Authors:  George Sangster
Journal:  Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc       Date:  2013-07-19

Review 6.  Biodiversity informatics: the challenge of linking data and the role of shared identifiers.

Authors:  Roderic D M Page
Journal:  Brief Bioinform       Date:  2008-04-29       Impact factor: 11.622

7.  Family-group names in Coleoptera (Insecta).

Authors:  Patrice Bouchard; Yves Bousquet; Anthony E Davies; Miguel A Alonso-Zarazaga; John F Lawrence; Chris H C Lyal; Alfred F Newton; Chris A M Reid; Michael Schmitt; S Adam Slipiński; Andrew B T Smith
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2011-04-04       Impact factor: 1.546

8.  Analyzing and synthesizing phylogenies using tree alignment graphs.

Authors:  Stephen A Smith; Joseph W Brown; Cody E Hinchliff
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2013-09-26       Impact factor: 4.475

9.  A system to automatically classify and name any individual genome-sequenced organism independently of current biological classification and nomenclature.

Authors:  Haitham Marakeby; Eman Badr; Hanaa Torkey; Yuhyun Song; Scotland Leman; Caroline L Monteil; Lenwood S Heath; Boris A Vinatzer
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-02-21       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  BioNames: linking taxonomy, texts, and trees.

Authors:  Roderic D M Page
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2013-10-29       Impact factor: 2.984

View more
  9 in total

1.  Two Influential Primate Classifications Logically Aligned.

Authors:  Nico M Franz; Naomi M Pier; Deeann M Reeder; Mingmin Chen; Shizhuo Yu; Parisa Kianmajd; Shawn Bowers; Bertram Ludäscher
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2016-03-22       Impact factor: 15.683

2.  Polyphyly of the traditional family Flabellinidae affects a major group of Nudibranchia: aeolidacean taxonomic reassessment with descriptions of several new families, genera, and species (Mollusca, Gastropoda).

Authors:  Tatiana Korshunova; Alexander Martynov; Torkild Bakken; Jussi Evertsen; Karin Fletcher; I Wayan Mudianta; Hiroshi Saito; Kennet Lundin; Bernard Picton
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2017-11-30       Impact factor: 1.546

3.  Phylogenetic revision of Minyomerus Horn, 1876 sec. Jansen & Franz, 2015 (Coleoptera, Curculionidae) using taxonomic concept annotations and alignments.

Authors:  M Andrew Jansen; Nico M Franz
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2015-10-20       Impact factor: 1.546

4.  Automated Integration of Trees and Traits: A Case Study Using Paired Fin Loss Across Teleost Fishes.

Authors:  Laura M Jackson; Pasan C Fernando; Josh S Hanscom; James P Balhoff; Paula M Mabee
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2018-07-01       Impact factor: 15.683

5.  Challenges with using names to link digital biodiversity information.

Authors:  David Patterson; Dmitry Mozzherin; David Peter Shorthouse; Anne Thessen
Journal:  Biodivers Data J       Date:  2016-05-25

6.  Emerging semantics to link phenotype and environment.

Authors:  Anne E Thessen; Daniel E Bunker; Pier Luigi Buttigieg; Laurel D Cooper; Wasila M Dahdul; Sami Domisch; Nico M Franz; Pankaj Jaiswal; Carolyn J Lawrence-Dill; Peter E Midford; Christopher J Mungall; Martín J Ramírez; Chelsea D Specht; Lars Vogt; Rutger Aldo Vos; Ramona L Walls; Jeffrey W White; Guanyang Zhang; Andrew R Deans; Eva Huala; Suzanna E Lewis; Paula M Mabee
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2015-12-14       Impact factor: 2.984

7.  Three new species of entimine weevils in Early Miocene amber from the Dominican Republic (Coleoptera: Curculionidae).

Authors:  Nico Franz; Guanyang Zhang
Journal:  Biodivers Data J       Date:  2017-02-03

8.  Incentivising use of structured language in biological descriptions: Author-driven phenotype data and ontology production.

Authors:  Hong Cui; James A Macklin; Joel Sachs; Anton Reznicek; Julian Starr; Bruce Ford; Lyubomir Penev; Hsin-Liang Chen
Journal:  Biodivers Data J       Date:  2018-11-07

9.  Taxonaut: an application software for comparative display of multiple taxonomies with a use case of GBIF Species API.

Authors:  Nozomi Ytow
Journal:  Biodivers Data J       Date:  2016-09-30
  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.