Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sherri de Coronado is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sherri de Coronado.


Journal of Biomedical Informatics | 2007

NCI Thesaurus: A semantic model integrating cancer-related clinical and molecular information

Nicholas Sioutos; Sherri de Coronado; Margaret W. Haber; Frank W. Hartel; Wen-Ling Shaiu; Lawrence W. Wright

Over the last 8 years, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) has launched a major effort to integrate molecular and clinical cancer-related information within a unified biomedical informatics framework, with controlled terminology as its foundational layer. The NCI Thesaurus is the reference terminology underpinning these efforts. It is designed to meet the growing need for accurate, comprehensive, and shared terminology, covering topics including: cancers, findings, drugs, therapies, anatomy, genes, pathways, cellular and subcellular processes, proteins, and experimental organisms. The NCI Thesaurus provides a partial model of how these things relate to each other, responding to actual user needs and implemented in a deductive logic framework that can help maintain the integrity and extend the informational power of what is provided. This paper presents the semantic model for cancer diseases and its uses in integrating clinical and molecular knowledge, more briefly examines the models and uses for drug, biochemical pathway, and mouse terminology, and discusses limits of the current approach and directions for future work.


Journal of Biomedical Informatics | 2008

caCORE version 3: Implementation of a model driven, service-oriented architecture for semantic interoperability

George A. Komatsoulis; Denise Warzel; Francis W. Hartel; Krishnakant Shanbhag; Ram Chilukuri; Gilberto Fragoso; Sherri de Coronado; Dianne M. Reeves; Jillaine B. Hadfield; Christophe Ludet; Peter A. Covitz

One of the requirements for a federated information system is interoperability, the ability of one computer system to access and use the resources of another system. This feature is particularly important in biomedical research systems, which need to coordinate a variety of disparate types of data. In order to meet this need, the National Cancer Institute Center for Bioinformatics (NCICB) has created the cancer Common Ontologic Representation Environment (caCORE), an interoperability infrastructure based on Model Driven Architecture. The caCORE infrastructure provides a mechanism to create interoperable biomedical information systems. Systems built using the caCORE paradigm address both aspects of interoperability: the ability to access data (syntactic interoperability) and understand the data once retrieved (semantic interoperability). This infrastructure consists of an integrated set of three major components: a controlled terminology service (Enterprise Vocabulary Services), a standards-based metadata repository (the cancer Data Standards Repository) and an information system with an Application Programming Interface (API) based on Domain Model Driven Architecture. This infrastructure is being leveraged to create a Semantic Service-Oriented Architecture (SSOA) for cancer research by the National Cancer Institutes cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG).


Journal of Biomedical Informatics | 2009

The NCI Thesaurus quality assurance life cycle

Sherri de Coronado; Lawrence W. Wright; Gilberto Fragoso; Margaret W. Haber; Elizabeth A. Hahn-Dantona; Francis W. Hartel; Sharon L. Quan; Tracy Safran; Nicole Thomas; Lori Whiteman

The National Cancer Institute Enterprise Vocabulary Services (NCI EVS) uses a wide range of quality assurance (QA) techniques to maintain and extend NCI Thesaurus (NCIt). NCIt is a reference terminology and biomedical ontology used in a growing number of NCI and other systems that extend from translational and basic research through clinical care to public information and administrative activities. Both automated and manual QA techniques are employed throughout the editing and publication cycle, which includes inserting and editing NCIt in NCI Metathesaurus. NCI EVS conducts its own additional periodic and ongoing content QA. External reviews, and extensive evaluation by and interaction with EVS partners and other users, have also played an important part in the QA process. There have always been tensions and compromises between meeting the needs of dependent systems and providing consistent and well-structured content; external QA and feedback have been important in identifying and addressing such issues. Currently, NCI EVS is exploring new approaches to broaden external participation in the terminology development and QA process.


Database | 2012

The mouse-human anatomy ontology mapping project.

Terry F. Hayamizu; Sherri de Coronado; Gilberto Fragoso; Nicholas Sioutos; James A. Kadin; Martin Ringwald

The overall objective of the Mouse–Human Anatomy Project (MHAP) was to facilitate the mapping and harmonization of anatomical terms used for mouse and human models by Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI) and the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The anatomy resources designated for this study were the Adult Mouse Anatomy (MA) ontology and the set of anatomy concepts contained in the NCI Thesaurus (NCIt). Several methods and software tools were identified and evaluated, then used to conduct an in-depth comparative analysis of the anatomy ontologies. Matches between mouse and human anatomy terms were determined and validated, resulting in a highly curated set of mappings between the two ontologies that has been used by other resources. These mappings will enable linking of data from mouse and human. As the anatomy ontologies have been expanded and refined, the mappings have been updated accordingly. Insights are presented into the overall process of comparing and mapping between ontologies, which may prove useful for further comparative analyses and ontology mapping efforts, especially those involving anatomy ontologies. Finally, issues concerning further development of the ontologies, updates to the mapping files, and possible additional applications and significance were considered. Database URL: http://obofoundry.org/cgi-bin/detail.cgi?id=ma2ncit


Archive | 2002

Information Standards Within the National Cancer Institute

Francis W. Hartel; Sherri de Coronado

As a federal research institution, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) both funds a large portfolio of external research and conducts scientific research in its own laboratories. It creates, maintains, and analyzes data related to funding grants and contracts; manages a large science portfolio; conducts and shares research; and manages its internal operations. The science supported both internally and externally ranges from the most basic research to large-scale clinical trials conducted by national cooperative clinical trials groups. Now more than ever, with “business to business” interoperation and data sharing among the members of the cancer community, NCI must meet the challenge of managing millions of data points.


Blood | 2002

Bethesda proposals for classification of nonlymphoid hematopoietic neoplasms in mice.

Scott C. Kogan; Jerrold M. Ward; Miriam R. Anver; Jules J. Berman; Cory Brayton; Robert D. Cardiff; John S. Carter; Sherri de Coronado; James R. Downing; Torgny N. Fredrickson; Diana C. Haines; Alan W. Harris; Nancy Lee Harris; Hiroshi Hiai; Elaine S. Jaffe; Ian C. M. MacLennan; Pier Paolo Pandolfi; Paul K. Pattengale; Archibald S. Perkins; R. Mark Simpson; Mark S. Tuttle; Joanne F. Wong; Herbert C. Morse


Studies in health technology and informatics | 2004

NCI Thesaurus: Using Science-Based Terminology to Integrate Cancer Research Results

Sherri de Coronado; Margaret W. Haber; Nicholas Sioutos; Mark S. Tuttle; Lawrence W. Wright


american medical informatics association annual symposium | 2007

Using the UMLS Semantic Network to Validate NCI Thesaurus Structure and Analyze its Alignment with the OBO Relations Ontology

Sherri de Coronado; Mark S. Tuttle; Harold R. Solbrig


ICBO/BioCreative | 2016

Visualizing the "Big Picture" of Change in NCIt's Biological Processes.

Yehoshua Perl; Christopher Ochs; Sherri de Coronado; Nicole Thomas


ICBO | 2017

Tailoring the NCI Thesaurus for Use in The OBO Library.

James P. Balhoff; Matthew H. Brush; Laura Christopherson; Sherri de Coronado; Gilberto Fragoso; Melissa Haendel; Chris Mungall; Kimberly Robasky; Nicole Vasilevsky; Lawrence W. Wright

Collaboration


Dive into the Sherri de Coronado's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gilberto Fragoso

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lawrence W. Wright

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Denise Warzel

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frank W. Hartel

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yehoshua Perl

New Jersey Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge