| Literature DB >> 27051515 |
David Nickerson1, Koray Atalag2, Bernard de Bono3, Jörg Geiger4, Carole Goble5, Susanne Hollmann6, Joachim Lonien7, Wolfgang Müller8, Babette Regierer9, Natalie J Stanford5, Martin Golebiewski8, Peter Hunter10.
Abstract
Reconstructing and understanding the Human Physiome virtually is a complex mathematical problem, and a highly demanding computational challenge. Mathematical models spanning from the molecular level through to whole populations of individuals must be integrated, then personalized. This requires interoperability with multiple disparate and geographically separated data sources, and myriad computational software tools. Extracting and producing knowledge from such sources, even when the databases and software are readily available, is a challenging task. Despite the difficulties, researchers must frequently perform these tasks so that available knowledge can be continually integrated into the common framework required to realize the Human Physiome. Software and infrastructures that support the communities that generate these, together with their underlying standards to format, describe and interlink the corresponding data and computer models, are pivotal to the Human Physiome being realized. They provide the foundations for integrating, exchanging and re-using data and models efficiently, and correctly, while also supporting the dissemination of growing knowledge in these forms. In this paper, we explore the standards, software tooling, repositories and infrastructures that support this work, and detail what makes them vital to realizing the Human Physiome.Entities:
Keywords: Human Physiome; managing big data; repositories; reproducible science; service infrastructure; standards
Year: 2016 PMID: 27051515 PMCID: PMC4759754 DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2015.0103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interface Focus ISSN: 2042-8898 Impact factor: 3.906