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http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/RCD
Ontology of clinical terms Version 3 (CTV3) (Read Codes) (Q199): National Health Service National Coding and Classification Centre
Proper citation: Read Codes Clinical Terms Version 3 (RRID:SCR_006055) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/RCTONT
Ontology specifically for Randomized Controlled Trials in order to facilitate the production of systematic reviews and metaanalysis.
Proper citation: Randomized Controlled Trials Ontology (RRID:SCR_005992) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/RETO
An application ontology for the domain of gene transcription regulation. The ontology integrates fragments of GO and MI with data from GOA, IntAct, UniProt, NCBI, KEGG and orthology relations.
Proper citation: Regulation of Transcription Ontology (RRID:SCR_006238) Copy
An ontology for the description of biological and clinical investigations built with international, collaborative effort. The ontology represents the design of an investigation, the protocols and instrumentation used, the material used, the data generated and the type analysis performed on it. This includes a set of universal terms that are applicable across various biological and technological domains, and domain-specific terms relevant only to a given domain. Currently OBI is being built under the Basic Formal Ontology (BFO). This project was formerly titled the Functional Genomics Investigation Ontology (FuGO) project.
Proper citation: Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (RRID:SCR_006266) Copy
Online catalog of human genes and genetic disorders, for clinical features, phenotypes and genes. Collection of human genes and genetic phenotypes, focusing on relationship between phenotype and genotype. Referenced overviews in OMIM contain information on all known mendelian disorders and variety of related genes. It is updated daily, and entries contain copious links to other genetics resources.
Proper citation: OMIM (RRID:SCR_006437) Copy
An ontology of bioinformatics operations (tool, application, or workflow functions), types of data including identifiers, topics (application domains), and data formats. The applications of EDAM are within organizing tools and data, finding suitable tools in catalogues, and integrating them into complex applications or workflows. Semantic annotations with EDAM are applicable to diverse entities such as for example Web services, databases, programmatic libraries, standalone tools and toolkits, interactive applications, data schemas, data sets, or publications within bioinformatics. Annotation with EDAM may also contribute to data provenance, and EDAM terms and synonyms can be used in text mining. EDAM - and in particular the EDAM Data sub-ontology - serves also as a markup vocabulary for bioinformatics data on the Semantic Web.
Proper citation: EDAM Ontology (RRID:SCR_006620) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/BDO
Ontology that provides a comprehensive and formal representation of the different domain concepts involved in documenting the full complexity of the skeletal dysplasia domain. It captures and combines the genetic features that discriminate the bone dysplasias with the multitude of phenotypic characteristics manifested by patients and required to be taken into account in order to support the diagnosis process.
Proper citation: Bone Dysplasia Ontology (RRID:SCR_006588) Copy
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/
Ontology that provides a normalized naming system for generic and branded drugs and a tool for supporting semantic interoperation between drug terminologies and pharmacy knowledge base systems. It contains the names of prescription and many over-the-counter drugs available in the United States and links its names to many of the drug vocabularies commonly used in pharmacy management and drug interaction software. It can mediate messages between systems not using the same software and vocabulary. * RxNorm Download Files - contain data consistent with the 2013AB UMLS Metathesaurus Release Files. * RxNorm API - web service for accessing the current RxNorm data set. * RxNorm Browser (RxNav) - a browser for several drug information sources, including RxNorm, RxTerms and National Drug File - Reference Terminology (NDF-RT) . * Current Prescribable Content - subset of currently prescribable drugs found in RxNorm. * RxTerms Drug Interface Terminology - a drug interface terminology derived from RxNorm for prescription writing or medication history recording
Proper citation: RxNorm (RRID:SCR_006645) Copy
https://wiki.nci.nih.gov/display/LexEVS/LexGrid
LexGrid (Lexical Grid) provides support for a distributed network of lexical resources such as terminologies and ontologies via standards-based tools, storage formats, and access/update mechanisms. The Lexical Grid Vision is for a distributed network of terminological resources. It is the foundation of the National Center for Biomedical Ontology BioPortal interface and web-services, and can parse OBO format, as well as other formats such as OWL. Currently, there are many terminologies and ontologies in existence. Just about every terminology has its own format, its own set of tools, and its own update mechanisms. The only thing that most of these pieces have in common with each other is their incompatibility. This makes it very hard to use these resources to their full potential. We have designed the Lexical Grid as a way to bridge terminologies and ontologies with a common set of tools, formats and update mechanisms. The Lexical Grid is: * accessible through a set of common APIs * joined through shared indices * online accessible * downloadable * loosely coupled * locally extendable * globally revised * available in web-space on web-time * cross-linked The realization of this vision requires three interlocking components, which are: * Standards - access methods and formats need to be published and openly available * Tools - standards based tools must be readily available * Content - commonly used terminologies have to be available for access and download Platform: Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: LexGrid (RRID:SCR_006627) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/BSAO
Ontology describing the anatomy and the development of Botryllus schlosseri.
Proper citation: Botryllus schlosseri anatomy and development ontology (RRID:SCR_006602) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MCBCC
Ontology covering a comprehensive list of cell lines derived from breast tissue, both normal and pathological. The ontology in built in OWL with cross relation to classes- genetic variation, pathological condition, genes, chemicals and drugs. The relations built enable semantic query across different classes
Proper citation: Breast Tissue Cell Lines Ontology (RRID:SCR_006686) Copy
Ontology to describe and categorize chemical biology and drug screening assays and their results including high-throughput screening (HTS) data for the purpose of categorizing assays and data analysis. BAO is an extensible, knowledge-based, highly expressive (currently SHOIQ(D)) description of biological assays making use of descriptive logic based features of the Web Ontology Language (OWL). BAO currently has over 700 classes and also makes use of several other ontologies. It describes several concepts related to biological screening, including Perturbagen, Format, Meta Target, Design, Detection Technology, and Endpoint. Perturbagens are perturbing agents that are screened in an assay; they are mostly small molecules. Assay Meta Target describes what is known about the biological system and / or its components interrogated in the assay (and influenced by the Perturbagen). Meta target can be directly described as a molecular entity (e.g. a purified protein or a protein complex), or indirectly by a biological process or event (e.g. phosphorylation). Format describes the biological or chemical features common to each test condition in the assay and includes biochemical, cell-based, organism-based, and variations thereof. The assay Design describes the assay methodology and implementation of how the perturbation of the biological system is translated into a detectable signal. Detection Technology relates to the physical method and technical details to detect and record a signal. Endpoints are the final HTS results as they are usually published (such as IC50, percent inhibition, etc). BAO has been designed to accommodate multiplexed assays. All main BAO components include multiple levels of sub-categories and specification classes, which are linked via object property relationships forming an expressive knowledge-based representation.
Proper citation: Bioassay Ontology (RRID:SCR_002638) Copy
Computable knowledge regarding functions of genes and gene products. GO resources include biomedical ontologies that cover molecular domains of all life forms as well as extensive compilations of gene product annotations to these ontologies that provide largely species-neutral, comprehensive statements about what gene products do. Used to standardize representation of gene and gene product attributes across species and databases.
Proper citation: Gene Ontology (RRID:SCR_002811) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MIRO
Application ontology for entities related to insecticide resistance in mosquitos
Proper citation: Mosquito Insecticide Resistance Ontology (RRID:SCR_003864) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/EMAP
A structured controlled vocabulary of stage-specific anatomical structures of the mouse (Mus).
Proper citation: Mouse Gross Anatomy and Development Ontology (RRID:SCR_003891) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MSTDE-FRE
Metathesaurus Version of Minimal Standard Terminology Digestive Endoscopy, French Translation, 2001
Proper citation: Minimal Standard Terminology of Digestive Endoscopy - French (RRID:SCR_003830) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/SNOMEDCT
Ontology of SNOMED (Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine) clinical terms.
Proper citation: Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine - Clinical Terms (RRID:SCR_003915) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MPATH
A structured controlled vocabulary of mutant and transgenic mouse pathology phenotypes
Proper citation: Mouse Pathology Ontology (RRID:SCR_003950) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/NHSQI2009
Ontology to organise a 2009 set of over 200 NHS quality indicators from different sources. Relationships between indicators, a basic set of inclusion / exclusion criteria, clinical pathway, clinical code and purpose (per 1992 Institute of Medicine, originally intended to categorise clinical guidelines) are identifies and made searchable.
Proper citation: NHS Quality Indicators (RRID:SCR_004005) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/OPB
A reference ontology of classical physics as applied to the dynamics of biological systems. It is designed to encompass the multiple structural scales (multiscale atoms to organisms) and multiple physical domains (multidomain fluid dynamics, chemical kinetics, particle diffusion, etc.) that are encountered in the study and analysis of biological organisms.
Proper citation: Ontology of Physics for Biology (RRID:SCR_004144) Copy
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