| Literature DB >> 31304272 |
Damion M Dooley1, Emma J Griffiths2,3, Gurinder S Gosal1, Pier L Buttigieg4, Robert Hoehndorf5, Matthew C Lange6, Lynn M Schriml7, Fiona S L Brinkman2, William W L Hsiao1,2,8.
Abstract
The construction of high capacity data sharing networks to support increasing government and commercial data exchange has highlighted a key roadblock: the content of existing Internet-connected information remains siloed due to a multiplicity of local languages and data dictionaries. This lack of a digital lingua franca is obvious in the domain of human food as materials travel from their wild or farm origin, through processing and distribution chains, to consumers. Well defined, hierarchical vocabulary, connected with logical relationships-in other words, an ontology-is urgently needed to help tackle data harmonization problems that span the domains of food security, safety, quality, production, distribution, and consumer health and convenience. FoodOn (http://foodon.org) is a consortium-driven project to build a comprehensive and easily accessible global farm-to-fork ontology about food, that accurately and consistently describes foods commonly known in cultures from around the world. FoodOn addresses food product terminology gaps and supports food traceability. Focusing on human and domesticated animal food description, FoodOn contains animal and plant food sources, food categories and products, and other facets like preservation processes, contact surfaces, and packaging. Much of FoodOn's vocabulary comes from transforming LanguaL, a mature and popular food indexing thesaurus, into a World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) OWL Web Ontology Language-formatted vocabulary that provides system interoperability, quality control, and software-driven intelligence. FoodOn compliments other technologies facilitating food traceability, which is becoming critical in this age of increasing globalization of food networks.Entities:
Keywords: Agriculture; Diseases; Environmental economics; Plant sciences; Sustainability
Year: 2018 PMID: 31304272 PMCID: PMC6550238 DOI: 10.1038/s41538-018-0032-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Sci Food ISSN: 2396-8370
Fig. 1[Food product diagram]. The FoodOn food product scheme derived mainly from LanguaL food description facets, with the addition of ontology relationships between a food product and its related descriptive qualities, components, and processes
A FoodOn food source term like ‘apple tree food source’ is positioned as a subclass of a common language named food groups like ‘pome fruit plant food source’, and is often qualified by at least one biological taxonomic identifier
| Food source term | Logical equivalency | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Apple tree as food source | subClassOf 'pome fruit plant food source' and ‘has taxonomic identifier’ some ‘ | Allows for subclasses of apple tree like honeycrisp (Malus pumila 'Honeycrisp') to be added which identify organism varieties. |
| European anchovy as food source | subClassOf ‘anchovy food source’ and ‘has taxonomic identifier’ some ‘ | ‘Anchovy food source’ is a FoodOn class of 13 different species of fish from around the world, one of which is the european anchovy, which has an NCBITaxon species of ‘Engraulis encrasicolus’. |
| Cricket as food source | subClassOf ‘insect food source’ and ‘has taxonomic identifier’ only (‘ | Crickets are considered a food source only in the case where instances are one of the given species. Other commonly edible species of cricket can be added to this definition over time. |
Fig. 2[Corn flakes diagram]. A sample of LanguaL facet terms used to describe a brand name corn flake breakfast cereal, and FoodOn’s corn flakes product representation which uses OWL ontology object properties to link a food product to its components, qualities, and processes
Fig. 3[Apple product diagram]. Overview of apple food products based on “apple (whole) food product”. Products have observable qualities and parts often as a result of the processes that transform them
Fig. 4[Foodon component pie-shaped diagram]. FoodOn reuses terms from a number of OBOFoundry.org ontologies as well as LanguaL and SIREN
Fig. 5[Subject branch diagram]. A tree visualization of 15 upper-level FoodOn topical branches
Fig. 6[Form application diagram]. Rendering a FoodOn-driven specification as a web form using the GEEM platform