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    Article: Evolutionary characters, phenotypes and ontologies: curating data from the systematic biology literature.
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    ABSTRACT: The wealth of phenotypic descriptions documented in the published articles, monographs, and dissertations of phylogenetic systematics is traditionally reported in a free-text format, and it is therefore largely inaccessible for linkage to biological databases for genetics, development, and phenotypes, and difficult to manage for large-scale integrative work. The Phenoscape project aims to represent these complex and detailed descriptions with rich and formal semantics that are amenable to computation and integration with phenotype data from other fields of biology. This entails reconceptualizing the traditional free-text characters into the computable Entity-Quality (EQ) formalism using ontologies. We used ontologies and the EQ formalism to curate a collection of 47 phylogenetic studies on ostariophysan fishes (including catfishes, characins, minnows, knifefishes) and their relatives with the goal of integrating these complex phenotype descriptions with information from an existing model organism database (zebrafish, http://zfin.org). We developed a curation workflow for the collection of character, taxonomic and specimen data from these publications. A total of 4,617 phenotypic characters (10,512 states) for 3,449 taxa, primarily species, were curated into EQ formalism (for a total of 12,861 EQ statements) using anatomical and taxonomic terms from teleost-specific ontologies (Teleost Anatomy Ontology and Teleost Taxonomy Ontology) in combination with terms from a quality ontology (Phenotype and Trait Ontology). Standards and guidelines for consistently and accurately representing phenotypes were developed in response to the challenges that were evident from two annotation experiments and from feedback from curators. The challenges we encountered and many of the curation standards and methods for improving consistency that we developed are generally applicable to any effort to represent phenotypes using ontologies. This is because an ontological representation of the detailed variations in phenotype, whether between mutant or wildtype, among individual humans, or across the diversity of species, requires a process by which a precise combination of terms from domain ontologies are selected and organized according to logical relations. The efficiencies that we have developed in this process will be useful for any attempt to annotate complex phenotypic descriptions using ontologies. We also discuss some ramifications of EQ representation for the domain of systematics.
    PLoS ONE 01/2010; 5(5):e10708. · 4.09 Impact Factor
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    Article: Phenex: ontological annotation of phenotypic diversity.
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    ABSTRACT: Phenotypic differences among species have long been systematically itemized and described by biologists in the process of investigating phylogenetic relationships and trait evolution. Traditionally, these descriptions have been expressed in natural language within the context of individual journal publications or monographs. As such, this rich store of phenotype data has been largely unavailable for statistical and computational comparisons across studies or integration with other biological knowledge. Here we describe Phenex, a platform-independent desktop application designed to facilitate efficient and consistent annotation of phenotypic similarities and differences using Entity-Quality syntax, drawing on terms from community ontologies for anatomical entities, phenotypic qualities, and taxonomic names. Phenex can be configured to load only those ontologies pertinent to a taxonomic group of interest. The graphical user interface was optimized for evolutionary biologists accustomed to working with lists of taxa, characters, character states, and character-by-taxon matrices. Annotation of phenotypic data using ontologies and globally unique taxonomic identifiers will allow biologists to integrate phenotypic data from different organisms and studies, leveraging decades of work in systematics and comparative morphology.
    PLoS ONE 01/2010; 5(5):e10500. · 4.09 Impact Factor
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    Conference Proceeding: Structured Representation of Biomedical Experiments: A Bottom-Up Approach.
    Cartik R. Kothari, Mark Wilkinson
    Proceedings of the 2008 International Conference on Information & Knowledge Engineering, IKE 2008, July 14-17, 2008, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; 01/2008
  • Article: Enhancing OWL Ontologies with Relation Semantics.
    Cartik R. Kothari, David J. Russomanno
    International Journal of Software Engineering and Knowledge Engineering. 01/2008; 18:327-356.
  • Conference Proceeding: From chaos to order: A generic, distributed, ontology based annotation system.
    Cartik R. Kothari, Mark Wilkinson
    Proceedings of the 2007 International Conference on Information & Knowledge Engineering, IKE 2007, June 25-28, 2007, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; 01/2007

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