To conform to FAIR principles, data should be findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. Whereas tools exist for making data findable and accessible, interoperability is not straightforward and can limit data reusability. Most interoperability-based solutions address semantic description and metadata linkage, but these alone are not sufficient for the requirements of inter-comparison of population-based cancer data, where strict adherence to data-rules is of paramount importance. Ontologies, and more importantly their formalism in description logics, can play a key role in the automation of data-harmonization processes predominantly via the formalization of the data validation rules within the data-domain model. This in turn leads t...
This document is the second iteration of three reports on the state of FAIR in the European scientif...
<p>The present–day health data ecosystem comprises a wide array of complex heterogeneous data source...
The data produced during a research project are too often collected for the sole purpose of the stud...
Introduction: The identification and incorporation of biomarkers in the treatment of people sufferin...
Introduction: The identification and incorporation of biomarkers in the treatment of people sufferin...
This document is the first iteration of three annual reports on the state of FAIR in European scient...
The aim of population-based cancer registries (CRs) is to obtain information from all new cases in a...
Population-based cancer registry data provide a key epidemiological resource for monitoring cancer i...
The process of making data Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR - FAIRification) v...
FAIR data principles and open science are globally endorsed as beneficial for healthcare. As co-foun...
Access to biomedical data is increasingly important to enable data driven science in the research co...
PURPOSE: The ongoing lack of data standardization severely undermines the potential for automated le...
Purpose: Effective use of routine data to support integrated chronic disease management (CDM) and po...
FAIR (findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability) guiding principles seek the reu...
PURPOSE: Effective use of routine data to support integrated chronic disease management (CDM) and po...
This document is the second iteration of three reports on the state of FAIR in the European scientif...
<p>The present–day health data ecosystem comprises a wide array of complex heterogeneous data source...
The data produced during a research project are too often collected for the sole purpose of the stud...
Introduction: The identification and incorporation of biomarkers in the treatment of people sufferin...
Introduction: The identification and incorporation of biomarkers in the treatment of people sufferin...
This document is the first iteration of three annual reports on the state of FAIR in European scient...
The aim of population-based cancer registries (CRs) is to obtain information from all new cases in a...
Population-based cancer registry data provide a key epidemiological resource for monitoring cancer i...
The process of making data Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR - FAIRification) v...
FAIR data principles and open science are globally endorsed as beneficial for healthcare. As co-foun...
Access to biomedical data is increasingly important to enable data driven science in the research co...
PURPOSE: The ongoing lack of data standardization severely undermines the potential for automated le...
Purpose: Effective use of routine data to support integrated chronic disease management (CDM) and po...
FAIR (findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability) guiding principles seek the reu...
PURPOSE: Effective use of routine data to support integrated chronic disease management (CDM) and po...
This document is the second iteration of three reports on the state of FAIR in the European scientif...
<p>The present–day health data ecosystem comprises a wide array of complex heterogeneous data source...
The data produced during a research project are too often collected for the sole purpose of the stud...