Anatomy Ontologies for Bioinformatics Principles and Practice

Bioinformatics as a discipline has come of age, and there are now numerous databases and tools that are widely used by researchers in the biomedical field. However, successful development of future bioinformatics applications will depend on an appropriately formalised representation of domain knowle...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Burger, Albert (Editor), Davidson, Duncan (Editor), Baldock, Richard (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: London Springer London 2008, 2008
Edition:1st ed. 2008
Series:Computational Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • Existing Anatomy Ontologies for Human, Model Organisms and Plants
  • Anatomical Ontologies for Model Organisms: The Fungi and Animals
  • Plant Structure Ontology (PSO)— A Morphological and Anatomical Ontology of Flowering Plants
  • Anatomy for Clinical Terminology
  • The Foundational Model of Anatomy Ontology
  • Towards a Disease Ontology
  • Engineering and Linking of Anatomy Ontologies
  • Ontology Alignment and Merging
  • COBrA and COBrA-CT: Ontology Engineering Tools
  • XSPAN — A Cross-Species Anatomy Network
  • Searching Biomedical Literature with Anatomy Ontologies
  • Anatomy Ontologies and Spatio-Temporal Atlases
  • Anatomical Ontologies: Linking Names to Places in Biology
  • Time in Anatomy
  • The Edinburgh Mouse Atlas
  • The Smart Atlas: Spatial and Semantic Strategies for Multiscale Integration of Brain Data
  • Anatomy Ontologies – Modelling Principles
  • Modelling Principles and Methodologies – Relations in Anatomical Ontologies
  • Modeling Principles and Methodologies - Spatial Representationand Reasoning
  • CARO – The Common Anatomy Reference Ontology