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http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/OGSF
Application ontology to model / represent the notion of genetic susceptibility to a specific disease or an adverse event or a pathological biological process. It is developed using BFO2.0''s framwork. The ontology is under the domain of genetic epidemiology.
Proper citation: Ontology for Genetic Susceptibility Factor (RRID:SCR_010386) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/ACGT-MO
Ontology to represent the domain of cancer research and management in a computationally tractable manner.
Proper citation: Cancer Research and Management ACGT Master Ontology (RRID:SCR_006953) Copy
http://www.evidenceontology.org
A controlled vocabulary that describes types of scientific evidence within the realm of biological research that can arise from laboratory experiments, computational methods, manual literature curation, and other means. Researchers can use these types of evidence to support assertions about research subjects that result from scientific research, such as scientific conclusions, gene annotations, or other statements of fact. ECO comprises two high-level classes, evidence and assertion method, where evidence is defined as a type of information that is used to support an assertion, and assertion method is defined as a means by which a statement is made about an entity. Together evidence and assertion method can be combined to describe both the support for an assertion and whether that assertion was made by a human being or a computer. However, ECO can not be used to make the assertion itself; for that, one would use another ontology, free text description, or other means. ECO was originally created around the year 2000 to support gene product annotation by the Gene Ontology. Today ECO is used by many groups concerned with provenance in scientific research. ECO is used in AmiGO 2
Proper citation: ECO (RRID:SCR_002477) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/OntoVIP
Ontology that describes the content of the models used in medical image simulation developed in the context of the Virtual Imaging Platform project (VIP), a french project aiming at sharing medical image simulation resources. This ontology can be used to annotate such models in order to highlight the different entities that are present in the 3D scene to be imaged, i.e. anatomical structures, pathological structures, foreign bodies, contrast agents etc. The model allows also to associate to these entities information about their physical qualities, which are used in the medical image simulation process (to mimick physical phenomena involved in CT, MR, US and PET imaging). This ontology partly relies on the OntoNeuroLOG ontology (ONL-DP ONL-MR-DA), as well as PATO, RadLex, FMA and ChEBI.
Proper citation: Medical image simulation (RRID:SCR_010355) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/ONL-MSA
Ontology that is a module of the OntoNeuroLOG ontology that covers the field of mental state assessments, i.e. instruments, instrument variables, assessments, and resulting scores, developed in the context of the NeuroLOG project, a french project aiming at integrating distributed heterogeous resources in neuroimaging. It includes a generic domain core ontology, that provides a general model of such entities and a general taxonomy of behavioural, neurosychological and neuroclinical instruments, that can be easily extended to model any particular kind of instrument. It also includes such extensions for 8 relatively standard instruments, namely: (1) the Beck-depression-inventory-(BDI-II), (2) the Expanded-Disability-Status-Scale, (3) the Controlled-oral-word-association-test, (4) the Free-and-Cued-Selective-Reminding-Test-with-Immediate-Recall-16-item-version-(The-Grober-and-Buschke-test), (5) the Mini-Mental-State, (6) the Stroop-color-and-word-test, (7) the Trail-making-test-(TMT), (8) the Wechsler-Adult-Intelligence-Scale-third-edition, (9) the Clinical-Dementia-Rating-scale, (10) the Category-verbal-fluency, (11) the Rey-Osterrieth-Complex-Figure-Test-(CFT).
Proper citation: Mental State Assessment (RRID:SCR_010357) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MSV
An ontology for metagenome sample metadata that mainly defines predicates.
Proper citation: Metagenome Sample Vocabulary (RRID:SCR_010358) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/TGMA
A structured controlled vocabulary of the anatomy of mosquitoes.
Proper citation: Mosquito Gross Anatomy Ontology (RRID:SCR_003839) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/CPTAC
A basic ontology which describes the proteomics pipeline infrastructure for CPTAC project
Proper citation: CPTAC Proteomics Pipeline Infrastructure Ontology (RRID:SCR_006945) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MSTDE
Metathesaurus Version of Minimal Standard Terminology Digestive Endoscopy. Bethesda, MD: National Library of Medicine, 2001.
Proper citation: Minimal Standard Terminology of Digestive Endoscopy (RRID:SCR_003785) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/SNMI
Ontology of systematized nomenclature of human and veterinary medicine: SNOMED International. Cote, Roger A., editor. Northfield (IL): College of American Pathologists; Schaumburg (IL): American Veterinary Medical Association, Version 3.5, 1998.
Proper citation: Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine - International Version (RRID:SCR_003849) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/NIGO
Ontology that is a subset of GO directed for neurological and immunological systems. It was created by clipping those GO terms that are not associated to any gene in human, rat and mouse, and by clipping terms not found to be relevant to the neural and/or immune domains.
Proper citation: Neural-Immune Gene Ontology (RRID:SCR_004120) Copy
http://mged.sourceforge.net/ontologies/MGEDontology.php
An ontology including concepts, definitions, terms, and resources for a standardized description of a microarray experiment in support of MAGE v.1. The MGED ontology is divided into the MGED Core ontology which is intended to be stable and in synch with MAGE v.1; and the MGED Extended ontology which adds further associations and classes not found in MAGE v.1. These terms will enable structure queries of elements of the experiments. Furthermore, the terms will also enable unambiguous descriptions of how the experiment was performed.
Proper citation: MGED Ontology (RRID:SCR_004484) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/PHENX
Ontology for standard measures related to complex diseases, phenotypic traits and environmental exposures
Proper citation: PhenX Phenotypic Terms (RRID:SCR_004518) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/ONTOPNEUMO
Ontology of pneumology (french version) developped by Audrey Baneyx, under the direction of Jean Charlet about knowledge engineering expertise and by Francois-Xavier Blanc in collaboration with Bruno Housset about medical expertise.
Proper citation: Ontology of Pneumology (RRID:SCR_004378) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/PVONTO
A pharmacovigilance ontology to connect known facts on drugs, disease, ADEs, and their molecular mechanisms.
Proper citation: Pharmacovigilance Ontology (RRID:SCR_004499) Copy
A collaborative ontology for the definition of sequence features used in biological sequence annotation. SO was initially developed by the Gene Ontology Consortium. Contributors to SO include the GMOD community, model organism database groups such as WormBase, FlyBase, Mouse Genome Informatics group, and institutes such as the Sanger Institute and the EBI. Input to SO is welcomed from the sequence annotation community. The OBO revision is available here: http://sourceforge.net/p/song/svn/HEAD/tree/ SO includes different kinds of features which can be located on the sequence. Biological features are those which are defined by their disposition to be involved in a biological process. Biomaterial features are those which are intended for use in an experiment such as aptamer and PCR_product. There are also experimental features which are the result of an experiment. SO also provides a rich set of attributes to describe these features such as polycistronic and maternally imprinted. The Sequence Ontologies use the OBO flat file format specification version 1.2, developed by the Gene Ontology Consortium. The ontology is also available in OWL from Open Biomedical Ontologies. This is updated nightly and may be slightly out of sync with the current obo file. An OWL version of the ontology is also available. The resolvable URI for the current version of SO is http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/so.owl.
Proper citation: SO (RRID:SCR_004374) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/OBOREL
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on April 23, 2014. Ontology that defines core relations used in all OBO ontologies. Obsolete. Replaced with RO.
Proper citation: Open Biological and Biomedical Ontologies Relationship Types (RRID:SCR_004409) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/PMR
Ontology for knowledge representation related to computer-based decision support in rehabilitation; concepts and relationships in the rehabilitation domain, integrating clinical practice, the ICD (specifically its 11th revision), the clinical investigator record ontology, the ICF and SNOMED CT.
Proper citation: Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (RRID:SCR_005948) Copy
http://www.human-phenotype-ontology.org/
Provides standardized vocabulary of phenotypic abnormalities encountered in human disease. Structured and controlled vocabulary for phenotypic features encountered in human hereditary and other disease. HPO is being developed in collaboration with members of OBO Foundry (Open Biological and Biomedical Ontologies), and logical definitions for HPO terms are being developed using PATO and a number of other ontologies including FMA, GO, ChEBI, and MPATH.
Proper citation: Human Phenotype Ontology (RRID:SCR_006016) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/RSA
An ontology for sequence annotations and how to preserve them with reference sequences.
Proper citation: Reference Sequence Annotation (RRID:SCR_006095) Copy
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