Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.
SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.
http://code.google.com/p/ogms/
An ontology based on the papers Toward an Ontological Treatment of Disease and Diagnosis and On Carcinomas and Other Pathological Entities to address some of the issues raised at the Workshop on Ontology of Diseases (Dallas, TX) and the Signs, Symptoms, and Findings Workshop (Milan, Italy). OGMS was formerly called the clinical phenotype ontology. Terms from OGMS hang from the Basic Formal Ontology.
Proper citation: Ontology for General Medical Science (RRID:SCR_010384) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/TOP-MENELAS
Ontology to (i) Provide better account of and better access to medical information through natural languages in order to help physicians in their daily practice, and to (ii) Enhance European cooperation by multilingual access to standardised medical nomenclatures. The major achievements of MENELAS are the realization of its two functional systems: (i) The Document Indexing System encodes free text PDSs into both an internal representation (a set of Conceptual Graphs) and international nomenclature codes (ICD-9-CM). Instances of the Document Indexing System have been realised for French, English and Dutch ; (ii) The Consultation System allows users to access the information contained in PDSs previously indexed by the Document Indexing System. The test domain for the project was coronary diseases. The existing prototype shows promising results for information retrieval from natural language PDSs and for automatically encoding PDSs into an existing classification such as ICD-9-CM. A set of components, tools, knowledge bases and methods has also been produced by the project. These include language-independent ontology and models for the domain of coronary diseases; conceptual description of the relevant ICD-9-CM codes. This ontology includes a top-ontology, a top-domain ontology and a domain ontology (Coronay diseases surgery). The menelas-top ontology here is the part of the whole ontology without any reference to medical domain.
Proper citation: Menelas Project Top-Level Ontology (RRID:SCR_010356) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MIRNAO
An application ontology for microRNAs.
Proper citation: MicroRNA Ontology (RRID:SCR_010360) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/TYPON
Ontology that provides a comprehensive description of the existing microbial typing methods for the identification of bacterial Isolates and their classification. Such a description constitutes an universal format for the exchange of information on the microbial typing field, providing a vehicle for the integration of the numerous disparate online databases. In its current version, TyPon describes most used microbial typing methods but it is, and always will be, a work in progress given the constant advances in the microbial typing field.
Proper citation: Microbial Typing Ontology (RRID:SCR_010362) Copy
https://blog.phenoscape.org/2008/05/14/the-teleost-taxonomy-ontology/
An ontology of taxonomic terms (names of taxonomic groups) used in the systematics of fish, including non-teleost groups such as Chondrichthys (sharks and rays), Sarcopterygii (lungfish and coelacanths), lampreys, and hagfish. It contains (as of August 2010) over 38,500 names, and over 44,000 taxonomic synonyms. A majority of the taxonomic names and synonyms were made available from the Catalog of Fishes. In July 2010 they added nearly 15,000 common names provided by Fishbase. Additional names and synonyms are added as a result of their curation activities. The ontology is being used to facilitate annotation of phenotypes, particularly for taxa that are not covered by NCBI because no submissions of molecular data have been made. Taxonomy ontologies can also be valuable in annotating legacy data, where authors make phenotype or ecological assertions (e.g., host-parasite associations) that refer to groups that are reorganized or no longer recognized. The taxonomy ontology serves as the source of taxa for their project's use for identifying evolutionary changes that match the phenotype of a zebrafish mutant.
Proper citation: Teleost Taxonomy Ontology (RRID:SCR_001611) Copy
Ontology used to describe the experimental conditions within cognitive and behavioral experiments, primarily in humans for application and use in the functional neuroimaging community. CogPO has been developed through the integration of the Functional Imaging Biomedical Informatics Research Network (FBIRN) Human Imaging Database (HID) and the BrainMap Database. The design of CogPO concentrates on what can be observed directly: categorization of each paradigm in terms of (1) the stimulus presented to the subjects, (2) the requested instructions, and (3) the returned response.
Proper citation: Cognitive Paradigm Ontology (RRID:SCR_002235) Copy
http://code.google.com/p/mental-functioning-ontology/
An ontology for mental functioning, including mental processes such as cognition and traits such as intelligence, and related diseases and disorders. It is developed in the context of the Ontology for General Medical Science and the Basic Formal Ontology. The project is being developed in collaboration between the University of Geneva, Switzerland, and the University at Buffalo, USA. The project is being developed with full involvement of all relevant communities, following best practices laid out by the OBO Foundry. Efforts are currently underway to align with related projects including the Behaviour Ontology, the Cognitive Atlas, the Cognitive Paradigm Ontology and the Neural Electro Magnetic Ontologies.
Proper citation: Mental Functioning Ontology (RRID:SCR_003245) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/SPD
An ontology for spider comparative biology including anatomical parts (e.g. leg, claw), behavior (e.g. courtship, combing) and products (i.g. silk, web, borrow).
Proper citation: Spider Ontology (RRID:SCR_003117) Copy
https://code.google.com/p/emotion-ontology/
An ontology of affective phenomena such as emotions, moods, appraisals and subjective feelings, designed to support interdisciplinary research by providing unified annotations. The ontology is a domain specialization of the broader Mental Functioning Ontology.
Proper citation: Emotion Ontology (RRID:SCR_003272) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/XCO
An ontology designed to represent the conditions under which physiological and morphological measurements are made both in the clinic and in studies involving humans or model organisms.
Proper citation: Experimental Conditions Ontology (RRID:SCR_003306) Copy
Organization that provides biomedical researchers with online tools and a web portal enabling them to access, review, and integrate disparate ontological resources in all aspects of biomedical investigation and clinical practice. A major focus of the work involves the use of biomedical ontologies to aid in the management and analysis of data derived from complex experiments.
Proper citation: National Center for Biomedical Ontology (RRID:SCR_003304) Copy
http://sourceforge.net/projects/vtontology/
A controlled vocabulary for the description of traits (measurable or observable characteristics) pertaining to the morphology, physiology, or development of vertebrate organisms.
Proper citation: Vertebrate Trait Ontology (RRID:SCR_003214) Copy
https://github.com/egonw/semanticchemistry
An ontology that aims to establish a standard in representing chemical information including chemical structure and the ability to richly describe chemical properties, whether intrinsic or computed. It includes terms for the descriptors commonly used in cheminformatics software applications and the algorithms which generate them.
Proper citation: Chemical Information Ontology (RRID:SCR_003290) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/FB-SP
The taxonomy of the family Drosophilidae (largely after Baechli) and of other taxa referred to in FlyBase.
Proper citation: Fly Taxonomy (RRID:SCR_003317) Copy
http://archive.gramene.org/plant_ontology/ontology_browse.html#to
A controlled vocabulary to describe phenotypic traits in plants. Each trait is a distinguishable feature, characteristic, quality or phenotypic feature of a developing or mature plant, or a plant part.
Proper citation: Plant Trait Ontology (RRID:SCR_003461) Copy
http://www.loria.fr/~coulet/sopharm2.0_description.php
A domain ontology implemented in OWL-DL, which proposes a formal description of pharmacogenomic knowledge. It articulates different ontologies that represent complementary sub-domains of pharmacogenomics, i.e. related to genotype, phenotype, drugs, and clinical trials. SO-Pharm enables the representation of pharmacogenomic relationships between a drug, a genomic variation and a phenotype trait. In addition, it enables the representation of a patient and more largely a panel included in trials, and populations. SO-Pharm enables the representation of measured items on patients such as results from the observation of a phenotype trait or of genomic variations. SO-Pharm supports knowledge about pharmacogenomic hypothesis, case study, and investigations in pharmacogenomics. SO-Pharm is designed to facilitate data integration and knowledge discovery in pharmacogenomics. In addition it provides a consistent articulation of ontologies of pharmacogenomic sub-domains.
Proper citation: Suggested Ontology for Pharmacogenomics (RRID:SCR_003497) Copy
An ontology of physico-chemical processes, i.e. physico-chemical changes occurring in course of time. It includes both microscopic processes (involving molecular entities or subatomic particles) and macroscopic processes. Some biochemical processes from Gene Ontology (GO Biological process) can be described as instances of REX.
Proper citation: Physico-Chemical Process (RRID:SCR_003530) Copy
An ontology for describing software tools, their types, tasks, versions, provenance and data associated (the input and output data types and the uses the software can be put to).
Proper citation: Software Ontology (RRID:SCR_003493) Copy
Ontology that describes structures from the dimensional range encompassing cellular and subcellular structure, supracellular domains, and macromolecules. It is built according to ontology development best practices (re-use of existing ontologies; formal definitions of terms; use of foundational ontologies). It describes the parts of neurons and glia and how these parts come together to define supracellular structures such as synapses and neuropil. Molecular specializations of each compartment and cell type are identified. The SAO was designed with the goal of providing a means to annotate cellular and subcellular data obtained from light and electron microscopy, including assigning macromolecules to their appropriate subcellular domains. The SAO thus provides a bridge between ontologies that describe molecular species and those concerned with more gross anatomical scales. Because it is intended to integrate into ontological efforts at these other scales, particular care was taken to construct the ontology in a way that supports such integration.
Proper citation: Subcellular Anatomy Ontology (RRID:SCR_003486) Copy
An ontology that classifies algorithms available for the simulation of models in biology, their characteristics and the parameters required for their use.
Proper citation: Kinetic Simulation Algorithm Ontology (RRID:SCR_003361) Copy
Can't find your Tool?
We recommend that you click next to the search bar to check some helpful tips on searches and refine your search firstly. Alternatively, please register your tool with the SciCrunch Registry by adding a little information to a web form, logging in will enable users to create a provisional RRID, but it not required to submit.
Welcome to the NIF Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by NIF and see how data is organized within our community.
You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that NIF has compiled. You can navigate through those categories from here or change to a different tab to execute your search through. Each tab gives a different perspective on data.
If you have an account on NIF then you can log in from here to get additional features in NIF such as Collections, Saved Searches, and managing Resources.
Here is the search term that is being executed, you can type in anything you want to search for. Some tips to help searching:
You can save any searches you perform for quick access to later from here.
We recognized your search term and included synonyms and inferred terms along side your term to help get the data you are looking for.
If you are logged into NIF you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.
Here are the sources that were queried against in your search that you can investigate further.
Here are the categories present within NIF that you can filter your data on
Here are the subcategories present within this category that you can filter your data on
If you have any further questions please check out our FAQs Page to ask questions and see our tutorials. Click this button to view this tutorial again.