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» Biomedical ontologies: a functional perspective
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BMCBI
2007
123views more  BMCBI 2007»
13 years 7 months ago
GO for gene documents
Annotating genes and their products with Gene Ontology codes is an important area of research. One approach for doing this is to use the information available about these genes in...
Padmini Srinivasan, Xin Ying Qiu
CORR
2010
Springer
130views Education» more  CORR 2010»
13 years 5 months ago
Ontology-based Queries over Cancer Data
The ever-increasing amount of data in biomedical research, and in cancer research in particular, needs to be managed to support efficient data access, exchange and integration. Exi...
Alejandra González Beltrán, Ben Tagg...
SIGMOD
2004
ACM
88views Database» more  SIGMOD 2004»
14 years 7 months ago
Using Reasoning to Guide Annotation with Gene Ontology Terms in GOAT
High-quality annotation of biological data is central to bioinformatics. Annotation using terms from ontologies provides reliable computational access to data. The Gene Ontology (...
Michael Bada, Daniele Turi, Robin McEntire, Robert...
BMCBI
2005
143views more  BMCBI 2005»
13 years 7 months ago
Evaluation of BioCreAtIvE assessment of task 2
Background: Molecular Biology accumulated substantial amounts of data concerning functions of genes and proteins. Information relating to functional descriptions is generally extr...
Christian Blaschke, Eduardo Andrés Le&oacut...
ER
2010
Springer
154views Database» more  ER 2010»
13 years 6 months ago
Modelling Functional Requirements in Spatial Design
Abstract. We demonstrate the manner in which high-level design requirements, e.g., as they correspond to the commonsensical conceptualisation of expert designers, may be formally s...
Mehul Bhatt, Joana Hois, Oliver Kutz, Frank Dylla