This paper provides a survey of the state-of-art of terminologies and ontologies in the fields of Biology and Medicine. Not intending to be fully comprehensive, we describe some of the most relevant resources that currently attract interest from industry and academia. We compare the resulting terminologies and ontologies in their expressive power and coverage, stress their contribution to these two fields and discuss some open issues and research challenges. 1
Objectives: Biomedical ontologies have been very successful in structuring knowl edge for many diffe...
Abstract. Medical terminology collects and organizes the many different kinds of terms employed in t...
Much of biology works by applying prior knowledge (`what is known') to an unknown entity, rathe...
This paper provides a survey of the state of the art in terminologies and ontologies applied to Biol...
fthe development of numerous shared terminolo-gies in the life sciences are unmatched in most other ...
In recent years ontologies have come to play an increasingly important role in the biomedical domain...
In recent years, as a knowledge-based discipline, bioinformatics has been made more computationally ...
The information explosion in biology makes it difficult for researchers to stay abreast of current b...
This paper is intended to explore how to use terminological resources for ontology engineering. N...
development and evaluation of controlled biomedical terminologies – especially, the representation o...
The complexity of certain knowledge domains, as Biomedicine, requires the application of advanced th...
This special issue covers selected papers from the 18th Bio-Ontologies Special Interest Group meetin...
Chapter 10: In the past decade, the development of standardised and machine-processable controlled v...
This special issue covers selected papers from the 18th Bio-Ontologies Special Interest Group meetin...
This paper is intended to explore how to use terminological resources for ontology engineering. Nowa...
Objectives: Biomedical ontologies have been very successful in structuring knowl edge for many diffe...
Abstract. Medical terminology collects and organizes the many different kinds of terms employed in t...
Much of biology works by applying prior knowledge (`what is known') to an unknown entity, rathe...
This paper provides a survey of the state of the art in terminologies and ontologies applied to Biol...
fthe development of numerous shared terminolo-gies in the life sciences are unmatched in most other ...
In recent years ontologies have come to play an increasingly important role in the biomedical domain...
In recent years, as a knowledge-based discipline, bioinformatics has been made more computationally ...
The information explosion in biology makes it difficult for researchers to stay abreast of current b...
This paper is intended to explore how to use terminological resources for ontology engineering. N...
development and evaluation of controlled biomedical terminologies – especially, the representation o...
The complexity of certain knowledge domains, as Biomedicine, requires the application of advanced th...
This special issue covers selected papers from the 18th Bio-Ontologies Special Interest Group meetin...
Chapter 10: In the past decade, the development of standardised and machine-processable controlled v...
This special issue covers selected papers from the 18th Bio-Ontologies Special Interest Group meetin...
This paper is intended to explore how to use terminological resources for ontology engineering. Nowa...
Objectives: Biomedical ontologies have been very successful in structuring knowl edge for many diffe...
Abstract. Medical terminology collects and organizes the many different kinds of terms employed in t...
Much of biology works by applying prior knowledge (`what is known') to an unknown entity, rathe...