Summer Training Opportunities

February 1, 2009

We are offering summer traineeships for graduate students and postdocs interested in gaining expertise in informatics and the application of ontologies to evolutionary, anatomical, developmental, and genetic data.

Opportunities are available to work as part of the Phenoscape team on data curation or open source software/database development. Participants would be located at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center or the University of South Dakota. Stipends of $5,000 will be given to participants to cover travel, room and board for 10-12 weeks. Read the rest of this entry »


Second “Evolutionary Biology & Ontologies” workshop

January 9, 2009

Our second “Evolutionary Biology & Ontologies Workshop” was held at the Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) meetings in Boston (January 5, 2009).  It was organized by the Phenoscape PIs (Paula Mabee, Todd Vision, Monte Westerfield), NESCent and Barry Smith from the National Center for Biomedical Ontologies (NCBO).  In our morning of talks, our speakers provided the audience with a solid introduction to ontologies, annotations, curation tools, databases, and examples of the integrative questions that can be answered using them.   The speakers, titles, and slides for these talks are available through the links below, and they provide an instructive resource for the community. Read the rest of this entry »


New Phenoscape data repository

November 6, 2008

We have set up a data repository on SourceForge to house the growing number of data files that are worked on daily by new curators and students. The repository uses Subversion (SVN) software to maintain current and all previous versions of each Phenex data file.  Curators “update” the local copies of data files on their computers with the current versions from the repository, add their modifications, and “commit” their modified local copy to the repository at the end of their work session.  We have been using ZigVersion as a friendly graphical client interface to SVN. Read the rest of this entry »


Introducing Phenex

October 30, 2008

After a summer of intensive development, at our recent Data Roundup we introduced curators to our new phenotype annotation software, Phenex. Phenex is an application for annotating character matrix files with ontology terms. Character states can be annotated using the Entity-Quality syntax for ontologically describing phenotypes. In addition, taxon entries can be annotated with identifiers from a taxonomy ontology. Phenex saves ontology annotations alongside traditional character matrix data using the new NeXML format standard for evolutionary data. Read the rest of this entry »


Report from the Phenoscape Data Roundup

October 24, 2008

“…where the buffalo roam and the data are rounded up-up all day….”

A few weeks ago, from Sep 27 to Oct 1, we met in the Black Hills of South Dakota with a group of guest data curators and outside advisors to curate high priority papers, refine the curation workflow and Phenex interface, and evaluate the first prototypes for the web-based user interface to the database. Not only did the workshop end up highly productive (see below), we also had a chance to observe the annual roundup of the largest herd of buffalo in North America, swim in cold Sylvan lake, and see Mount Rushmore one evening. Read the rest of this entry »


Curation from Summer ’08

August 30, 2008

Curation of evolutionary phenotypes from the systematic evolutionary literature of fishes is central to accomplishing our goal, which is to prototype an ontology-based informatics system to integrate evolutionary, anatomical, developmental, and genetics data. This summer we accomplished a fair chunk of curation, and I’m summarizing this here (see graph below). Read the rest of this entry »


Adding Instances To Ontologies

August 24, 2008

As we proposed in an earlier post, we have been developing an alternative to the traditional approach of representing taxonomy in ontologies. This alternative represents species (and currently higher taxa) as individuals in the ontology.

There is another phenoscape ontology that would benefit from the use of individuals: our ontology (ok, it’s really a vocabulary) of research collections of fish. Part of our process for curating anatomy papers involves constructing a list of all the specimens reported in the paper (generally the author includes this in the paper, but we enter it to facilitate annotation). The specimen lists consist of collection names and numbers. Although research collections are supposed to have standardize names and abbreviations, practice does not always reflect these standards: the same collection may be abbreviated in different ways by different authors, and collections occasionally merge and the smaller collections might disappear into larger ones or be renamed.

So we constructed a vocabulary of fish collections with their 4-5 letter abbreviations, longer name and possible synonyms. Now a research collection contains individual specimens, but these are parts of a collection, not subtypes of a particular collection, and therefore, the collection is best represented as an individual, not a class. So, the collections vocabulary, represented as an OBO ontology, should ideally use OBO instances (which exist to represent individuals), rather than terms for the collections.

Unfortunately, the current version of OBO-Edit, although it will read and save ontologies containing Individuals, provides no facility for either viewing or editing these individuals. Furthermore, although there are several OWL editors that would allow us to work with Individuals, there are no OBO<->OWL translators that understand what to do with OWL individuals, so they are just omitted in the OBO translation, even though the OBO file format, since version 1.2, has supported Instance ‘stanzas.’ Read the rest of this entry »


Evolutionary Biology & Ontologies Workshop report

July 11, 2008

Our first educational and outreach event “Evolutionary Biology & Ontologies Workshop” was held at the Evolution meetings in Minneapolis, Minnesota (June 20, 2008), and we felt it was a big success.  We had lots of enthusiasm and over 50 attendees for this all day workshop, which was organized by the Phenoscape PIs (Paula Mabee, Todd Vision, Monte Westerfield), NESCent and Barry Smith from the National Center for Biomedical Ontologies (NCBO). 

We need to especially thank all our speakers for their excellent presentations, They not only gave the audience a varied introduction to ontologies, but also a set of examples of the integrative questions that can be answered using them.   The slideshows for all of these talks are on our wiki but I thought I would provide a brief overview of each one right below as a summary of the workshop. The use of ontologies is just emerging in evolutionary biology, and it is an exciting time to be involved in this field.  As we move forward to use ontologies in evolutionary biology, we discover new requirements and challenges — for example, the challenge of how we create ontologies that are interoperable — so that we can ask big questions that span not only taxonomic groups (such as bees and fishes and mouse and fly) but different knowledge domains (such as phenotype, evolution, and genetics, genomics, medicine). Read the rest of this entry »


Relations Ontology Workshop

June 10, 2008

Peter Midford and I recently attend the two-day Relations Ontology workshop in Denver, Colorado. The goal of the meeting was to further develop the Relations Ontology (RO) by moving relations from RO proposed (ontology for relations yet to be officially added to RO) to RO, and adding any new relations proposed by attendees. Impressively, almost all of the items on the original agenda were covered, and an ‘action list’ was produced to focus efforts subsequent to the meeting.

Phenoscape had several relations on the agenda, and Peter and I have summarized the discussion, definitions, and examples used.

Read the rest of this entry »


The Teleost Anatomy Ontology

May 22, 2008

The Teleost Anatomy Ontology (TAO) is a multi-species anatomy ontology for teleost fishes.  In this first post about the TAO, I’ll introduce the structure of the ontology and its development, and discuss some of the challenges we’ve come across in building a multi-species ontology. You can browse the TAO by using the NCBO BioPortal.

Read the rest of this entry »