- From: kei cheung <kei.cheung@yale.edu>
- Date: Tue, 06 Jun 2006 13:34:06 -0400
- To: "Miller, Michael D (Rosetta)" <Michael_Miller@Rosettabio.com>
- Cc: Alan Ruttenberg <alanruttenberg@gmail.com>, donald.doherty@brainstage.com, wilbanks@creativecommons.org, Daniel Rubin <dlrubin@stanford.edu>, public-semweb-lifesci@w3.org, Matthew Cockerill <matt@biomedcentral.com>
Hi Michael et al., Karen Skinner (of NIDA) has once pointed me to the following public microarray experiment related to the study of Parkinson's Disease http://arrayconsortium.tgen.org/np2/viewProject.do?action=viewProject&projectId=61 My question is that can we use FuGO or FuGO-OM or other ontologies (MGED-OWL) to describe this experiment (or part of it)? This might also serve as a Parkinson use case study for the ontology working group. Cheers, -Kei Miller, Michael D (Rosetta) wrote: >Hi All, > > > >>Thanks for pointing us to FuGO. To me, it seems like that the FuGO >>community is currently defining an upper ontology that can be >>universally used to describe different types of genomic/proteomic >>experiments including microarray experiments. >> >> > >This, I believe, is their goal. > > > >>but >>there is no >>example use for microarray experiments. >> >> > >To actually describe microarray experiments (and proteomics, etc.), it >is expected that this will be done through extensions of FuGE-OM, a UML >model that takes experiences from MAGEv1 and PEDRo (and others) to >create an object model that describes what is basic to all biological >based experiments. MAGEv2 will extend this model. > >One goal of FuGO is: > >"The purpose of this ontology is to support the consistent annotation of >functional genomics experiments, regardless of the particular field of >study." > >So it is unlikely at this point that there will be a class >"Hybridization" or "FeatureExtraction" in the ontology but there is >likely to be terms that describe particular ways of doing a >hybridization or feature extraction. > >FuGO is still at an early stage, see http://fugo.sourceforge.net/ for >how someone can contribute. > >cheers, >Michael > > > >>-----Original Message----- >>From: public-semweb-lifesci-request@w3.org >>[mailto:public-semweb-lifesci-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of kei cheung >>Sent: Tuesday, June 06, 2006 9:52 AM >>To: Alan Ruttenberg >>Cc: donald.doherty@brainstage.com; >>wilbanks@creativecommons.org; 'Daniel Rubin'; >>public-semweb-lifesci@w3.org; 'Matthew Cockerill' >>Subject: Re: MGED/FuGO. was: Re: BioRDF [Telcon]: slides for >>the UMLS presentation >> >> >> >>Hi Alan, >> >>Thanks for pointing us to FuGO. To me, it seems like that the FuGO >>community is currently defining an upper ontology that can be >>universally used to describe different types of genomic/proteomic >>experiments including microarray experiments. There is a draft OWL >>version of FuGO >>(http://fugo.sourceforge.net/ontology/FuGO.owl). A list >>of use case uses is also shown at: >>http://fugo.sourceforge.net/ontologyInfo/ontology.php, but >>there is no >>example use for microarray experiments. So it might be worthwhile to >>take a look at how FuGO can be used to describe microarray >>experiments >>(at least at a high level). >> >>Cheers, >> >>-Kei >> >>Alan Ruttenberg wrote: >> >> >> >>>On Jun 5, 2006, at 9:15 PM, kc28 wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>>It might be time to think about how to convert mged ontology or >>>>mage-ml into RDF/OWL. The following are two related articles: >>>> >>>>http://www.nature.com/msb/journal/v2/n1/full/msb4100052.html >>>>http://www.nature.com/nbt/journal/v23/n9/full/nbt0905-1095.html >>>> >>>>Cheers, >>>> >>>>-Kei >>>> >>>> >>>As I understand it, this is the nature of the FuGO project: >>>http://fugo.sourceforge.net/ >>>They have an upcoming workshop >>>http://www.ebi.ac.uk/microarray/General/Events/FuGO2006/index.html >>> >>>-Alan >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> >> >> > > > >
Received on Tuesday, 6 June 2006 19:11:00 UTC