- From: Robert Hoehndorf <robert.hoehndorf@kaust.edu.sa>
- Date: Tue, 08 Sep 2015 20:08:50 +0300
- To: semantic-web@w3.org
The Journal of Biomedical Semantics devotes a review cycle and a joint collection of publications to papers describing ontologies of value to the biological community. The 2015 JBMS Ontology Issue contains: - papers describing new ontologies that formalize and describe biological or biomedical domain knowledge at different levels, including genomic, proteomic, tissue, organ and organism levels, as well as organizational structures such as systems, topologies, functional relatedness and others, and - papers describing substantial updates to existing ontologies. Important dates --------------- Presubmission inquiry due: 15 October 2015 Manuscripts due: 1 December 2015 Submission ---------- Authors wishing to submit manuscripts for the 2015 JBMS Ontology Issue should read and follow these instructions. Authors must contact the organisers at bmontol@jbiomedsem.com to check the suitability of their proposed submission by 15 October, 2015 at the latest. A maximum one page summary should be submitted for this purpose, outline the content of the ontology and its applications in biological and biomedical research. Following acceptance of the proposal, the submission of the full manuscripts to the JBMS Ontology Issue will be via the JBMS website by 1 December, 2015. We will accept two types of manuscript: Ontology Descriptions and Ontology Updates: - An ontology description can be used to describe an ontology that has not previously been published in a significant journal. - An ontology update describes the recent development and changes to an ontology. Ontology updates are useful when an ontology has already been published, and the authors wish to make the research community aware of improvement, changes and further development of the ontology. The authors should point out the improvements and advancements that have been made since the latest publication of the ontology (e.g., number of additional terms, improvements in formal or textual term definitions, extension of the ontology scope, novel applications). Ontologies published in the JBMS Ontology Issue must be freely available at the time of submission. The proposal and the manuscripts must contain a description of the restrictions on the use of the ontology, e.g., a statement such as "This ontology is free and open to all users." We will consider manuscripts describing ontologies that are free for academic use only, in which case the conditions of use must be described in detail. We will not consider ontologies that are not available at the time of submission, or which require the payment of a fee. If in doubt, please contact the organizers at bmontol@jbiomedsem.com. All proposals and articles must contain a link to a website at which the ontology is available, the names, affiliations, and email addresses of all authors. All proposals and articles must contain a description of the actual or intended use of the ontology for biological or biomedical research. If applicable, the one page summary should provide complete citations for previous publications of the ontology. For proposals given approval, the manuscript submission deadline will be on 1 December 2015. Authors should submit their manuscript electronically through the JBMS Manuscripts submission site (http://www.jbiomedsem.com). Authors may consider to use the name of the ontology as the first word in the title of the article and should include within the abstract a valid URL from which the ontology can be accessed. JBMS is available in full-text form on the web (www.jbiomedsem.com), and each article will contain a link to its ontology URL. The manuscript should include a description of the ontology including the coverage of domain knowledge. Submissions should typically be 4-5 printed journal pages in length, and authors are encouraged to be succinct in their writing. The ontology must be completely functional and have been tested at the time of submission. Reviewers should not be expected to debug the loading of the ontology into a viewer and significant problems that should have been picked up during testing will be grounds for rejection. For specific information on manuscript format, please consult the general Instructions to Authors at http://www.jbiomedsem.com/authors/instructions/database or http://www.jbiomedsem.com/authors/instructions/research. For any questions, please don't hesitate to contact the organizers of the JBMS Ontology Issue (Dietrich Rebholz-Schuhmann and Robert Hoehndorf) at bmontol@jbiomedsem.com. With best wishes, Dietrich & Robert.
Received on Thursday, 10 September 2015 21:35:01 UTC