Difference between revisions of "Tutorial: Introduction to Biomedical Ontology for Clinical and Translational Research"
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'''10:30am Morning Session''' | '''10:30am Morning Session''' | ||
− | ::Foundations of Biomedical Ontology | + | ::'''Foundations of Biomedical Ontology''' |
:::''What is an ontology and what is it useful for?'' | :::''What is an ontology and what is it useful for?'' | ||
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:::''Examples of biomedical ontologies:'' | :::''Examples of biomedical ontologies:'' | ||
::::*Gene Ontology (GO) | ::::*Gene Ontology (GO) | ||
− | ::::* | + | ::::*Ontology for General Medical Science (OGMS) |
::::*Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO) | ::::*Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO) | ||
'''12:30 pm Lunch''' | '''12:30 pm Lunch''' | ||
− | '''1:30pm Afternoon Session''' | + | '''1:30pm Afternoon Session 1''' |
− | ::Ontology Technology | + | ::'''Ontology Technology''' |
− | + | :::''Introduction to NCBO Technology | |
− | :::''Introduction to NCBO Technology | + | ::::*BioPortal |
− | :::* | + | ::::*Web Services |
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− | ''' | + | '''3:00pm Break''' |
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+ | '''3:30pm Afternoon Session 2''' | ||
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+ | :::Examples of use of NCBO services for data retrieval, integration and reasoning | ||
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+ | :::Examples of CTSA use cases enabled by NCBO technology | ||
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+ | '''5:30pm Close''' |
Revision as of 12:09, 10 January 2012
April 24, 2012
Faculty: Barry Smith (Buffalo / NCBO) and Nigam Shah (Stanford / NCBO)
This tutorial will provide participants with an understanding of how ontologies and terminologies are used in a variety of contexts in clinical and translational research.
By the end of the tutorial, participants will be able to:
- Understand the biomedical ontology landscape
- Understand the national infrastructure available for data annotation and knowledge management
- Learn about NCBO supported Web service workflows for clinical and translational research.
The National Center for Biomedical Ontology (NCBO) offers a range of Web services that allow users to access biomedical terminologies and ontologies, to use ontology terms to create pick lists and lexicons, to identify terms from controlled terminologies and ontologies that can describe and index the contents of online data sets (data annotation), and to recommend particular terminologies and ontologies that would be appropriate for data-annotation tasks. The tutorial will demonstrate the use of NCBO resources to facilitate tasks such as semantic data integration, information retrieval, structured data entry, and knowledge management. We will review example use cases for analyses using disease ontologies and for applying NCBO tools to compute the risk of having a myocardial infarction on taking Vioxx (rofecoxib) for Rheumatoid arthritis.
10:00am Registration and coffee
10:30am Morning Session
- Foundations of Biomedical Ontology
- What is an ontology and what is it useful for?
- The problem of data silos
- NIH mandates for sharing and reuse of research data
- Examples of biomedical ontologies:
- Gene Ontology (GO)
- Ontology for General Medical Science (OGMS)
- Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO)
- Foundations of Biomedical Ontology
12:30 pm Lunch
1:30pm Afternoon Session 1
- Ontology Technology
- Introduction to NCBO Technology
- BioPortal
- Web Services
- Introduction to NCBO Technology
- Ontology Technology
3:00pm Break
3:30pm Afternoon Session 2
- Examples of use of NCBO services for data retrieval, integration and reasoning
- Examples of CTSA use cases enabled by NCBO technology
5:30pm Close