User:TiagoLubiana/sandbox/Open Biological and Biomedical Ontology
It has been suggested that Relation Ontology be merged into this page. (Discuss) Proposed since March 2020. |
It has been suggested that OBO Foundry be merged into this page. (Discuss) Proposed since April 2020. |
The Open Biological and Biomedical Ontology (OBO; formerly Open Biomedical Ontologies) is an effort to create ontologies (controlled vocabularies) for use across biological and medical domains. The creation of OBO in 2001 was largely inspired by the efforts of the Gene Ontology project. [1]
OBO forms part of the resources of the U.S. National Center for Biomedical Ontology (NCBIO) and a central element of the NCBO's BioPortal. It is an initiative led by the OBO Foundry.
OBO Foundry
[edit]The OBO ontology library forms the basis of the OBO Foundry,[2] a collaborative experiment involving a group of ontology developers who have agreed in advance to the adoption of a growing set of principles specifying best practices in ontology development. These principles are designed to foster interoperability of ontologies within the broader OBO framework and also to ensure a gradual improvement of quality and formal rigor in ontologies. The library operates to design ways to meet the increasing needs of data and information integration in the biomedical domain.
The OBO file format
[edit]The OBO file format is a biology-oriented language for building ontologies. It is based on the principles of Web Ontology Language (OWL).
As a community effort, a standard common mapping has been created for lossless roundtrip transformations between Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) format and OWL[3]. The research contains methodical examination of each of the constructs of OBO and a layer cake for OBO, similar to the Semantic Web stack.[4]
See also
[edit]- Ontology Lookup Service
- Gene Ontology Consortium
- Sequence Ontology
- Generic Model Organism Databases
- Functional Genomics Data (FGED)
- Ontology for Biomedical Investigations
- Plant ontology
- Phenoscape
References
[edit]- ^ Shimoyama, Mary; Shimoyama, Mary; Dwinell, Melinda; Jacob, Howard (2009-08-05). "Multiple Ontologies for Integrating Complex Phenotype Datasets". Nature Precedings. doi:10.1038/npre.2009.3554. ISSN 1756-0357.
- ^ Smith, B.; Ashburner, M.; Rosse, C.; Bard, J.; Bug, W.; Ceusters, W.; Goldberg, L. J.; Eilbeck, K.; Ireland, A.; Mungall, C. J.; Leontis, N.; Rocca-Serra, P.; Ruttenberg, A.; Sansone, S. A.; Scheuermann, R. H.; Shah, N.; Whetzel, P. L.; Lewis, S. (2007). "The OBO Foundry: Coordinated evolution of ontologies to support biomedical data integration". Nature Biotechnology. 25 (11): 1251–1255. doi:10.1038/nbt1346. PMC 2814061. PMID 17989687.
- ^ Golbreich, Christine; Horridge, Matthew; Horrocks, Ian; Motik, Boris; Shearer, Rob (2007), "OBO and OWL: Leveraging Semantic Web Technologies for the Life Sciences", The Semantic Web, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, pp. 169–182, ISBN 978-3-540-76297-3, retrieved 2020-03-17
- ^ Antezana, E.; Egana, M.; De Baets, B.; Kuiper, M.; Mironov, V. (2008). "ONTO-PERL: An API for supporting the development and analysis of bio-ontologies". Bioinformatics. 24 (6): 885–887. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btn042. PMID 18245124.
External links
[edit]- Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO)
- Ontology Lookup Service website
- Ontology browser for most of the Open Biological Ontologies at BRENDA website
- PubOnto: OBO-based literature search tool
- ONTO-PERL
- SimCT Web-based tool to display relationships between biological objects annotated to an ontology in the form of a tree, based on their annotation similarity. On archive.org
- Morphster Project by University of Austin, Texax. On archive.org
Category:Bioinformatics Category:Ontology (information science)