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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Schober is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Schober.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Promoting coherent minimum reporting guidelines for biological and biomedical investigations: the MIBBI project

Chris F. Taylor; Dawn Field; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Jan Aerts; Rolf Apweiler; Michael Ashburner; Catherine A. Ball; Pierre Alain Binz; Molly Bogue; Tim Booth; Alvis Brazma; Ryan R. Brinkman; Adam Clark; Eric W. Deutsch; Oliver Fiehn; Jennifer Fostel; Peter Ghazal; Frank Gibson; Tanya Gray; Graeme Grimes; John M. Hancock; Nigel Hardy; Henning Hermjakob; Randall K. Julian; Matthew Kane; Carsten Kettner; Christopher R. Kinsinger; Eugene Kolker; Martin Kuiper; Nicolas Le Novère

The Minimum Information for Biological and Biomedical Investigations (MIBBI) project aims to foster the coordinated development of minimum-information checklists and provide a resource for those exploring the range of extant checklists.


Applied Ontology | 2011

MIREOT: The minimum information to reference an external ontology term

Mélanie Courtot; Frank Gibson; Allyson L. Lister; James Malone; Daniel Schober; Ryan R. Brinkman; Alan Ruttenberg

While the Web Ontology Language OWL provides a mechanism to import ontologies, this mechanism is not always suitable. Current editing tools present challenges for working with large ontologies and direct OWL imports can prove impractical for day-to-day development. Furthermore, external ontologies often undergo continuous change which can introduce conflicts when integrated with multiple efforts. Finally, importing heterogeneous ontologies in their entirety may lead to inconsistencies or unintended inferences. In this paper we propose a set of guidelines for importing required terms from an external resource into a target ontology. We describe the methodology, its implementation, present some examples of this application, and outline future work and extensions.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2009

Survey-based naming conventions for use in OBO Foundry ontology development.

Daniel Schober; Barry Smith; Suzanna E. Lewis; Waclaw Kusnierczyk; Jane Lomax; Christopher J. Mungall; Chris F. Taylor; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Susanna-Assunta Sansone

BackgroundA wide variety of ontologies relevant to the biological and medical domains are available through the OBO Foundry portal, and their number is growing rapidly. Integration of these ontologies, while requiring considerable effort, is extremely desirable. However, heterogeneities in format and style pose serious obstacles to such integration. In particular, inconsistencies in naming conventions can impair the readability and navigability of ontology class hierarchies, and hinder their alignment and integration. While other sources of diversity are tremendously complex and challenging, agreeing a set of common naming conventions is an achievable goal, particularly if those conventions are based on lessons drawn from pooled practical experience and surveys of community opinion.ResultsWe summarize a review of existing naming conventions and highlight certain disadvantages with respect to general applicability in the biological domain. We also present the results of a survey carried out to establish which naming conventions are currently employed by OBO Foundry ontologies and to determine what their special requirements regarding the naming of entities might be. Lastly, we propose an initial set of typographic, syntactic and semantic conventions for labelling classes in OBO Foundry ontologies.ConclusionAdherence to common naming conventions is more than just a matter of aesthetics. Such conventions provide guidance to ontology creators, help developers avoid flaws and inaccuracies when editing, and especially when interlinking, ontologies. Common naming conventions will also assist consumers of ontologies to more readily understand what meanings were intended by the authors of ontologies used in annotating bodies of data.


Metabolomics | 2016

Data standards can boost metabolomics research, and if there is a will, there is a way

Philippe Rocca-Serra; Reza M. Salek; Masanori Arita; Elon Correa; Saravanan Dayalan; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Timothy M. D. Ebbels; Royston Goodacre; Janna Hastings; Kenneth Haug; Albert Koulman; Macha Nikolski; Matej Orešič; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Daniel Schober; J. Smith; Christoph Steinbeck; Mark R. Viant; Steffen Neumann

Thousands of articles using metabolomics approaches are published every year. With the increasing amounts of data being produced, mere description of investigations as text in manuscripts is not sufficient to enable re-use anymore: the underlying data needs to be published together with the findings in the literature to maximise the benefit from public and private expenditure and to take advantage of an enormous opportunity to improve scientific reproducibility in metabolomics and cognate disciplines. Reporting recommendations in metabolomics started to emerge about a decade ago and were mostly concerned with inventories of the information that had to be reported in the literature for consistency. In recent years, metabolomics data standards have developed extensively, to include the primary research data, derived results and the experimental description and importantly the metadata in a machine-readable way. This includes vendor independent data standards such as mzML for mass spectrometry and nmrML for NMR raw data that have both enabled the development of advanced data processing algorithms by the scientific community. Standards such as ISA-Tab cover essential metadata, including the experimental design, the applied protocols, association between samples, data files and the experimental factors for further statistical analysis. Altogether, they pave the way for both reproducible research and data reuse, including meta-analyses. Further incentives to prepare standards compliant data sets include new opportunities to publish data sets, but also require a little “arm twisting” in the author guidelines of scientific journals to submit the data sets to public repositories such as the NIH Metabolomics Workbench or MetaboLights at EMBL-EBI. In the present article, we look at standards for data sharing, investigate their impact in metabolomics and give suggestions to improve their adoption.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Ontology for Biomedical Investigations

Anita Bandrowski; Ryan R. Brinkman; Mathias Brochhausen; Matthew H. Brush; Bill Bug; Marcus C. Chibucos; Kevin Clancy; Mélanie Courtot; Dirk Derom; Michel Dumontier; Liju Fan; Jennifer Fostel; Gilberto Fragoso; Frank Gibson; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Melissa Haendel; Yongqun He; Mervi Heiskanen; Tina Hernandez-Boussard; Mark Jensen; Yu Lin; Allyson L. Lister; Phillip Lord; James P. Malone; Elisabetta Manduchi; Monnie McGee; Norman Morrison; James A. Overton; Helen Parkinson; Bjoern Peters

The Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI) is an ontology that provides terms with precisely defined meanings to describe all aspects of how investigations in the biological and medical domains are conducted. OBI re-uses ontologies that provide a representation of biomedical knowledge from the Open Biological and Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) project and adds the ability to describe how this knowledge was derived. We here describe the state of OBI and several applications that are using it, such as adding semantic expressivity to existing databases, building data entry forms, and enabling interoperability between knowledge resources. OBI covers all phases of the investigation process, such as planning, execution and reporting. It represents information and material entities that participate in these processes, as well as roles and functions. Prior to OBI, it was not possible to use a single internally consistent resource that could be applied to multiple types of experiments for these applications. OBI has made this possible by creating terms for entities involved in biological and medical investigations and by importing parts of other biomedical ontologies such as GO, Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI) and Phenotype Attribute and Trait Ontology (PATO) without altering their meaning. OBI is being used in a wide range of projects covering genomics, multi-omics, immunology, and catalogs of services. OBI has also spawned other ontologies (Information Artifact Ontology) and methods for importing parts of ontologies (Minimum information to reference an external ontology term (MIREOT)). The OBI project is an open cross-disciplinary collaborative effort, encompassing multiple research communities from around the globe. To date, OBI has created 2366 classes and 40 relations along with textual and formal definitions. The OBI Consortium maintains a web resource (http://obi-ontology.org) providing details on the people, policies, and issues being addressed in association with OBI. The current release of OBI is available at http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/obi.owl.


Metabolomics | 2015

COordination of Standards in MetabOlomicS (COSMOS): facilitating integrated metabolomics data access

Reza M. Salek; Steffen Neumann; Daniel Schober; Jan Hummel; Kenny Billiau; Joachim Kopka; Elon Correa; Theo H. Reijmers; Antonio Rosato; Leonardo Tenori; Paola Turano; Silvia Marin; Catherine Deborde; Daniel Jacob; Dominique Rolin; Benjamin Dartigues; Pablo Conesa; Kenneth Haug; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Steve O’Hagan; Jie Hao; Michael van Vliet; Marko Sysi-Aho; Christian Ludwig; Jildau Bouwman; Marta Cascante; Timothy M. D. Ebbels; Julian L. Griffin; Annick Moing; Macha Nikolski

Abstract Metabolomics has become a crucial phenotyping technique in a range of research fields including medicine, the life sciences, biotechnology and the environmental sciences. This necessitates the transfer of experimental information between research groups, as well as potentially to publishers and funders. After the initial efforts of the metabolomics standards initiative, minimum reporting standards were proposed which included the concepts for metabolomics databases. Built by the community, standards and infrastructure for metabolomics are still needed to allow storage, exchange, comparison and re-utilization of metabolomics data. The Framework Programme 7 EU Initiative ‘coordination of standards in metabolomics’ (COSMOS) is developing a robust data infrastructure and exchange standards for metabolomics data and metadata. This is to support workflows for a broad range of metabolomics applications within the European metabolomics community and the wider metabolomics and biomedical communities’ participation. Here we announce our concepts and efforts asking for re-engagement of the metabolomics community, academics and industry, journal publishers, software and hardware vendors, as well as those interested in standardisation worldwide (addressing missing metabolomics ontologies, complex-metadata capturing and XML based open source data exchange format), to join and work towards updating and implementing metabolomics standards.


Metabolomics | 2007

Metabolomics standards initiative: ontology working group work in progress

Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Daniel Schober; Helen J. Atherton; Oliver Fiehn; Helen Jenkins; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Denis V. Rubtsov; Irena Spasic; Larisa N. Soldatova; Chris F. Taylor; Andy Tseng; Mark R. Viant

In this article we present the activities of the Ontology Working Group (OWG) under the Metabolomics Standards Initiative (MSI) umbrella. Our endeavour aims to synergise the work of several communities, where independent activities are underway to develop terminologies and databases for metabolomics investigations. We have joined forces to rise to the challenges associated with interpreting and integrating experimental process and data across disparate sources (software and databases, private and public). Our focus is to support the activities of the other MSI working groups by developing a common semantic framework to enable metabolomics-user communities to consistently annotate the experimental process and to enable meaningful exchange of datasets. Our work is accessible via a public webpage and a draft ontology has been posted under the Open Biological Ontology umbrella. At the very outset, we have agreed to minimize duplications across omics domains through extensive liaisons with other communities under the OBO Foundry. This is work in progress and we welcome new participants willing to volunteer their time and expertise to this open effort.


Applied Ontology | 2011

Overcoming the ontology enrichment bottleneck with Quick Term Templates

Philippe Rocca-Serra; Alan Ruttenberg; Martin J. O'Connor; Patricia L. Whetzel; Daniel Schober; Jay Greenbaum; Mélanie Courtot; Ryan R. Brinkman; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Richard H. Scheuermann; Bjoern Peters

When developing the Ontology of Biomedical Investigations (OBI), the process of adding classes with similar patterns of logical definition is time consuming, error prone, and requires an editor to have some expertise in OWL. Moreover, the process is poorly suited for a large number of domain experts who have limited experience with ontology development, and this can hinder contributions. We have developed a procedure to ease this task and allow such domain experts to add terms to the ontology in a way that both effectively includes complex logical definitions, yet requires minimal manual intervention by the OBI developers. The procedure is based on editing a Quick Term Template in a spreadsheet format that is subsequently converted into an OWL file. This procedure promises to be a robust and scalable approach for ontology enrichment as evidenced by encouraging results obtained when evaluated with an early version of the MappingMaster Protege plugin.


Journal of Biomedical Semantics | 2012

OntoCheck: verifying ontology naming conventions and metadata completeness in Protégé 4

Daniel Schober; Ilinca Tudose; Vojtech Svátek; Martin Boeker

BackgroundAlthough policy providers have outlined minimal metadata guidelines and naming conventions, ontologies of today still display inter- and intra-ontology heterogeneities in class labelling schemes and metadata completeness. This fact is at least partially due to missing or inappropriate tools. Software support can ease this situation and contribute to overall ontology consistency and quality by helping to enforce such conventions.ObjectiveWe provide a plugin for the Protégé Ontology editor to allow for easy checks on compliance towards ontology naming conventions and metadata completeness, as well as curation in case of found violations.ImplementationIn a requirement analysis, derived from a prior standardization approach carried out within the OBO Foundry, we investigate the needed capabilities for software tools to check, curate and maintain class naming conventions. A Protégé tab plugin was implemented accordingly using the Protégé 4.1 libraries. The plugin was tested on six different ontologies. Based on these test results, the plugin could be refined, also by the integration of new functionalities.ResultsThe new Protégé plugin, OntoCheck, allows for ontology tests to be carried out on OWL ontologies. In particular the OntoCheck plugin helps to clean up an ontology with regard to lexical heterogeneity, i.e. enforcing naming conventions and metadata completeness, meeting most of the requirements outlined for such a tool. Found test violations can be corrected to foster consistency in entity naming and meta-annotation within an artefact. Once specified, check constraints like name patterns can be stored and exchanged for later re-use. Here we describe a first version of the software, illustrate its capabilities and use within running ontology development efforts and briefly outline improvements resulting from its application. Further, we discuss OntoChecks capabilities in the context of related tools and highlight potential future expansions.ConclusionsThe OntoCheck plugin facilitates labelling error detection and curation, contributing to lexical quality assurance in OWL ontologies. Ultimately, we hope this Protégé extension will ease ontology alignments as well as lexical post-processing of annotated data and hence can increase overall secondary data usage by humans and computers.


ieee international conference on information technology and applications in biomedicine | 2009

An ontology of image representations for medical image mining

Dimitris K. Iakovidis; Daniel Schober; Martin Boeker; Stefan Schulz

Ontologies are an effective means to formally specify and constrain knowledge. They have proved their utility in various data mining applications, especially in annotating text to render it machine interpretable. More challenging research perspectives arise when ontologies are used to annotate images where the information is encoded in numeric pixel values rather than in natural language. Current approaches to bridge the gap between the pixel-based foundational representation and high level image semantics include the utilization of taxonomies describing 2D spatial relations between the depicted objects and hence linking image features with semantics. To this end we present a novel ontological approach that formalizes concepts and relations regarding image representations for medical image mining. It provides descriptors for pixels, image regions, image features, and clusters. It extends previous approaches by including assertions of spatial relations between clusters in multidimensional feature spaces. The relational assertions enable the linkage between a given image, image region and feature(s) to the object they represent. The proposed approach is more general than most current approaches and can be easily extended to support multimodal data mining.

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Stefan Schulz

Medical University of Graz

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Kenneth Haug

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Reza M. Salek

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Ryan R. Brinkman

University of British Columbia

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