| Literature DB >> 30012108 |
Syed Ahmad Chan Bukhari1, Marcos Martínez-Romero2, Martin J O' Connor2, Attila L Egyedi2, Debra Willrett2, John Graybeal2, Mark A Musen2, Kei-Hoi Cheung3,4, Steven H Kleinstein5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Public biomedical data repositories often provide web-based interfaces to collect experimental metadata. However, these interfaces typically reflect the ad hoc metadata specification practices of the associated repositories, leading to a lack of standardization in the collected metadata. This lack of standardization limits the ability of the source datasets to be broadly discovered, reused, and integrated with other datasets. To increase reuse, discoverability, and reproducibility of the described experiments, datasets should be appropriately annotated by using agreed-upon terms, ideally from ontologies or other controlled term sources.Entities:
Keywords: BioPortal; CEDAR; FAIR; Metadata; NCBI; NCBO; Ontology
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30012108 PMCID: PMC6048706 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-018-2247-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1CEDAR OnDemand Workflow. (1) CEDAR OnDemand is installed as a Google Chrome browser extension. When activated by the user (by toggling the icon), the web page in the browser will be analyzed. Users can customize a list of suggested ontologies used by CEDAR OnDemand and any point through a dialogue box with dropdown list (2) An HTML tags detection script identifies the text fields by analyzing the HTML INPUT tags and fetches their labels. Fetched labels are then passed to the NCBO to get the related ontology recommendations. This BioPortal ontology recommendation list is compared to the user suggested ontology list to find the qualified ontologies (3) CEDAR OnDemand associates the qualified ontology list to the detected input fields. Subsequently, NCBO Annotator service is invoked to match field values with the qualified set of ontologies to suggest ontology-based metadata
CEDAR OnDemand Qualified Ontologies for each NCBI BioSample Field
| Field names | Qualified ontologies |
|---|---|
| Sample Name | Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Organism | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Isolate | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Age | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Biomaterial Provider | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Tissue | Uber Anatomy Ontology (UBERON), Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT), Cell Ontology (CL), Cell Line Ontology (CLO) |
| Cell line | Cell Line Ontology (CLO), Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Cell subtype | Cell Ontology (CL), Gene Ontology (GO), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Cell type | Cell Ontology (CL), Cell Line Ontology (CLO), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Culture Collection | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Development Stage | Gene Ontology (GO), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Disease | Human Disease Ontology (DOID), Cell Line Ontology (CLO), Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Disease Stage | Human Disease Ontology (DOID), Cell Line Ontology (CLO), Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Ethnicity | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Health state | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Karyotype | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Phenotype | Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Population | Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI) |
| Race | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Sample type | National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
| Treatment | Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI), National Cancer Institute Thesaurus (NCIT) |
Field Names column lists the Human Sample attributes of NCBI BioSample. Qualified Ontologies are the ontologies which CEDAR OnDemand algorithm recommends