The Cell Ontology (CL) aims for the representation of in vivo and in vitro cell types from all of biology. The CL is a candidate reference ontology of the OBO Foundry and requires extensive revision to bring it up to current standards for biomedical ontologies, both in its structure and its coverage of various subfields of biology. We have now addressed the specific content of one area of the CL, the section of the ontology dealing with hematopoietic cells. This section has been extensively revised to improve its content and eliminate multiple inheritance in the asserted hierarchy, and the groundwork has been laid for structuring the hematopoietic cell type terms as cross-products incorporating logical definitions built from relati...
<div><p>Cell lines are frequently used as highly standardized and reproducible <em>in vitro</em> mod...
Abstract for Human Cell Atlas General Meeting: Defining and cataloging human cell types is a chall...
textabstractThe blood contains several different types of cells. Each of these cell types is quite d...
The Cell Ontology (CL) aims for the representation of in vivo and in vitro cell types from all of bi...
AbstractThe Cell Ontology (CL) aims for the representation of in vivo and in vitro cell types from a...
BACKGROUND: The Cell Ontology (CL) is an ontology for the representation of in vivo cell types. As b...
BackgroundThe Cell Ontology (CL) is an OBO Foundry candidate ontology covering the domain of canonic...
Abstract Cell cultures used in biomedical experiments come in the form of both sample biopsy primary...
We describe an ontology for cell types that covers the prokaryotic, fungal, animal and plant worlds....
Abstract Background Within the cancer domain, ontologies play an important role in the integration a...
An ontological representation of the entities relevant to biological research is urgently needed. T...
Abstract Cell cultures and cell lines are widely used in life science experiments. In conjunction wi...
Massive single-cell profiling efforts have accelerated our discovery of the cellular composition of ...
Cell lines are frequently used as highly standardized and reproducible in vitro models for biomedica...
Abstract Background Human immunology studies often rely on the isolation and quantification of cell ...
<div><p>Cell lines are frequently used as highly standardized and reproducible <em>in vitro</em> mod...
Abstract for Human Cell Atlas General Meeting: Defining and cataloging human cell types is a chall...
textabstractThe blood contains several different types of cells. Each of these cell types is quite d...
The Cell Ontology (CL) aims for the representation of in vivo and in vitro cell types from all of bi...
AbstractThe Cell Ontology (CL) aims for the representation of in vivo and in vitro cell types from a...
BACKGROUND: The Cell Ontology (CL) is an ontology for the representation of in vivo cell types. As b...
BackgroundThe Cell Ontology (CL) is an OBO Foundry candidate ontology covering the domain of canonic...
Abstract Cell cultures used in biomedical experiments come in the form of both sample biopsy primary...
We describe an ontology for cell types that covers the prokaryotic, fungal, animal and plant worlds....
Abstract Background Within the cancer domain, ontologies play an important role in the integration a...
An ontological representation of the entities relevant to biological research is urgently needed. T...
Abstract Cell cultures and cell lines are widely used in life science experiments. In conjunction wi...
Massive single-cell profiling efforts have accelerated our discovery of the cellular composition of ...
Cell lines are frequently used as highly standardized and reproducible in vitro models for biomedica...
Abstract Background Human immunology studies often rely on the isolation and quantification of cell ...
<div><p>Cell lines are frequently used as highly standardized and reproducible <em>in vitro</em> mod...
Abstract for Human Cell Atlas General Meeting: Defining and cataloging human cell types is a chall...
textabstractThe blood contains several different types of cells. Each of these cell types is quite d...