User:Ilya/Registry

To do

 * Map parts database schema to RDF/OWL (D2R Map/Server)
 * Use RDF/OWL to describe neuronal data available in SenseLab - similar project
 * HCLSIG BioRDF subgroup tasks - interesting projects
 * Use LSID for parts identification
 * setup LSID resolution service
 * How to represent sequence features (do they belong to sequence or part)?
 * Part has features and has a sequence (piece of DNA with molecular function combined by BB assembly)
 * Sequence has features but a part already has sequence
 * Tools to create and edit ontology and RDF instances?
 * Protege from Stanford?
 * IsaViz from W3C?
 * existing RDBMS <-> RDF <-> objects (e.g., Javascript)
 * Do we need "Device"?
 * I want to build a NOR gate vs. I have a NOR gate
 * Find a way to use MediaWiki software to work with the Semantic Web ontology of biological parts: create a UI from the description of a part in the ontology that would check the entered information for correctness according to the part definition in the ontology.

To read

 * Deductive Biocomputing
 * As biologists increasingly rely upon computational tools, it is imperative that they be able to appropriately apply these tools and clearly understand the methods the tools employ. Such tools must have access to all the relevant data and knowledge and, in some sense, “understand” biology so that they can serve biologists' goals appropriately and “explain” in biological terms how results are computed.


 * Semantic Web Boot Camp 2007 IAP
 * SemanticTools.ru
 * How To Tell Stuff To A Computer - The Enigmatic Art of Knowledge Representation
 * HCLS Demo given in Banff at WWW2007
 * DataPortability project - share and remix data using open standards
 * (theinfo) - for people with large data sets
 * IBM Semantic Layered Research Platform
 * Linked Data is to spreadsheets and databases what the Web of hypertext documents is to word processor files
 * Semantic Web Education and Outreach (SWEO) Interest Group
 * Cool URIs for the Semantic Web - document explaining the effective use of URIs to enable the growth of the Semantic Web
 * Freebase is an open, shared database of the world's knowledge
 * Using RDF on the Web: A Survey, A Vision
 * W3C RDB2RDF Incubator Group
 * Biositemap allows scientists, engineers, centers and institutions engaged in modeling, software tool development and analysis of biomedical and informatics data to broadcast and disseminate to the world the information about their latest computational biology resources (data, software tools and web-services) - from Wikipedia.
 * Software Ontology
 * Bio-Health Informatics Group at the University of Manchester
 * The Information Management Group at the University of Manchester
 * Semantic search
 * Topaz is a powerful object to RDF persistence and query service (used by PLoS).

BBF standards

 * Technical standards
 * Data exchange
 * Part Interaction and Composition Assertion Framework Draft Proposal Documents
 * BrickIt data model aims to create a portable web-based registry that helps synthetic biologists to plan, organize and track their local biobrick samples (wiki)
 * Biobricks at Biohack wiki

External projects

 * ConnectingMe project will develop a new application architecture that uses a semantic web information repository and data integration engine along with a user customizable presentation engine
 * Jourknow - semantic web personal info organizer (FAQ)

Meetings

 * Cambridge Semantic Web Gatherings
 * Demos:
 * MultimediaN N9C Eculture project homepage
 * CMCH Database of Literature smart search
 * OpenLink iSPARQL

Data or metadata
(from LSID best practices) Data is defined as a sequence of unchanging bytes. Examples of data are microscope images, a protein sequence, a text file, etc. Metadata is usually information that describes the data either literally (date created, MD5 check sum, size) or contains information describing the relationship between the data and other objects. If you cannot determine what should be data and what should be metadata from your data model, follow this rule of thumb: Large byte sequences are easier to manipulate as data, while short byte sequences can be included as data, metadata, or made available in both forms.

From XML to RDF
From XML to RDF: how semantic web technologies will change the design of 'omic' standards

Microformats

 * microformats.org
 * XFN - Xhtml Friends Network

Miscellaneous

 * Semantics - the meaning that is implied by words and sentences.
 * Software agent can search distributed registries using an ontology. This is impossible right now because storage schema is unknown.
 * Data is represented by a graph of triples (statements about resources)
 * Syntax doesn't matter: there are many ways to serialize the data (XML, N3, etc).
 * HCLS task forces:
 * BIORDF (Structured data to RDF) - Susie Stephen, Joanne Luciano co-leads
 * T2S (Text to Structured RDF) - Robert Futrelle, Matthew Cockerill
 * Architecture of the World Wide Web @ W3C
 * Reification @ Wikipedia
 * Metadata
 * Semantic mapper is tool or service that aids in the transformation of data elements from one namespace into another namespace.
 * Metadata registry is a central location in an organization where metadata definitions are stored and maintained in a controlled method.
 * XSLT vs XQuery
 * A Semantic Web Primer for Object-Oriented Software Developers - OO vs SW, links to software, etc
 * rdfs:label vs rdfs:comment
 * used to describe a resource with human readable text in addition to "pure" RDF properties (may have multiple values for internationalization needs)
 * rdfs:label is used to give a human-readable name of a resource
 * rdfs:comment is used to give a longer description
 * rdf:about and rdf:ID in RDF/XML
 * Resource manipulation and description: URIQA, REST, WebDAV, WSDL, etc
 * WebDAV for REST
 * REST in WSDL
 * Web Description Proposals
 * Logic studies the laws of valid inference (the act or process of deriving a conclusion based solely on what one already knows).
 * Closed world assumption is the presumption that what is not currently known to be true is false.
 * Open World Assumption assumes that its knowledge of the world is incomplete. If something cannot be proved to be true, then it doesn't automatically become false.