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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.

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On page 8 showing 141 ~ 160 out of 379 results
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http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/FB-CV

A structured controlled vocabulary used for various aspects of annotation by FlyBase. This ontology is maintained by FlyBase for various aspects of annotation not covered, or not yet covered, by other OBO ontologies. If and when community ontologies are available for the domains here covered FlyBase will use them.

Proper citation: FlyBase Controlled Vocabulary (RRID:SCR_003318) Copy   


http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/FYPO

A formal ontology of phenotypes observed in fission yeast that is being developed to support the comprehensive and detailed representation of phenotypes in PomBase, the online fission yeast resource. Its scope is similar to that of the Ascomycete Phenotype Ontology (APO), but FYPO includes more detailed pre-composed terms as well as computable definitions.

Proper citation: Fission Yeast Phenotype Ontology (RRID:SCR_003315) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003349

http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/LIPRO

An ontology that describes the LIPIDMAPS nomenclature classification explicitly using description logics (OWL-DL). Lipid classes are organized hierarchically with the super-classes restricted by generic necessary conditions. More specific necessary conditions are used to define membership requirements for sub classes of lipid according to appropriate functional groups. Lipid research is increasingly integrated within systems level biology such as lipidomics where lipid classification is required before appropriate annotation of chemical functions can be applied.

Proper citation: Lipid Ontology (RRID:SCR_003349) Copy   


http://code.google.com/p/popcomm-ontology/

An ontology that models material entities, qualities, and processes related to collections of interacting organisms such as populations and communities. It is taxon neutral, and can be used for any species, including humans. The classes in the PCO are useful for describing evolutionary processes, organismal interactions, and ecological experiments. Practical applications of the PCO include community health care, plant pathology, behavioral studies, sociology, and ecology. The PCO is compliant with the Basic Formal Ontology (BFO) and is designed to be compatible with other OBO Foundry ontologies, such as the Gene Ontology (GO), which covers biological processes, and the Phenotypic Quality Ontology (PATO).

Proper citation: Population and Community Ontology (RRID:SCR_003462) Copy   


http://archive.gramene.org/plant_ontology/ontology_browse.html#eo

A structured controlled vocabulary for the representation of plant environmental conditions.

Proper citation: Plant Environmental Conditions (RRID:SCR_003460) Copy   


http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MMO

An ontology designed to represent the variety of methods used to make qualitative and quantitative clinical and phenotype measurements both in the clinic and with model organisms.

Proper citation: Measurement Method Ontology (RRID:SCR_003373) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003379

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://sig.biostr.washington.edu/projects/fm/

A domain ontology that represents a coherent body of explicit declarative knowledge about human anatomy. It is concerned with the representation of classes or types and relationships necessary for the symbolic representation of the phenotypic structure of the human body in a form that is understandable to humans and is also navigable, parseable and interpretable by machine-based systems. Its ontological framework can be applied and extended to all other species. The description of how the OWL version was generated is in Pushing the Envelope: Challenges in a Frame-Based Representation of Human Anatomy by N. F. Noy, J. L. Mejino, C. Rosse, M. A. Musen: http://bmir.stanford.edu/publications/view.php/pushing_the_envelope_challenges_in_a_frame_based_representation_of_human_anatomy The Foundational Model of Anatomy ontology has four interrelated components: # Anatomy taxonomy (At), # Anatomical Structural Abstraction (ASA), # Anatomical Transformation Abstraction (ATA), # Metaknowledge (Mk), The ontology contains approximately 75,000 classes and over 120,000 terms; over 2.1 million relationship instances from over 168 relationship types link the FMA's classes into a coherent symbolic model.

Proper citation: FMA (RRID:SCR_003379) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003529

http://code.google.com/p/pharmgkb-owl/

An OWL representation of the data in PharmGKB, Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) and DrugBank and linked to related ontologies: ChEBI ontology, the Human Disease Ontology (DO), the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System (ATC) and the Medical Subject Headings Thesaurus (MESH). The combined knowledge base can be exploited using the ELK reasoner.

Proper citation: PharmGKB Ontology (RRID:SCR_003529) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003369

http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/IDOMAL

An application ontology to cover all aspects of malaria (clinical, epidemiological, biological, etc) as well as the intervention attempts to control it, extending the infectious disease ontology (IDO).

Proper citation: Malaria Ontology (RRID:SCR_003369) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003428

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.oae-ontology.org

Biomedical ontology in the domain of adverse events that aims to standardize adverse event annotation, integrate various adverse event data, and support computer-assisted reasoning. AEO is a community-based ontology. Its development follows the OBO Foundry principles.

Proper citation: Ontology of Adverse Events (RRID:SCR_003428) Copy   


http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MAT

An ontology of minimal set of terms for anatomy.

Proper citation: Minimal Anatomical Terminology (RRID:SCR_003385) Copy   


http://code.google.com/p/adverse-event-reporting-ontology/

An ontology aimed at supporting clinicians at the time of data entry, increasing quality and accuracy of reported adverse events.

Proper citation: Adverse Event Reporting Ontology (RRID:SCR_003571) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003449

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://rgd.mcw.edu/tools/ontology/ont_search.cgi

Ontology that defines hierarchical display of different rat strains as derived from parental strains. Ontology Browser allows to retrieve all genes, QTLs, strains and homologs annotated to particular term. Covers all types of biological pathways including altered and disease pathways, and to capture relationships between them within hierarchical structure. Five nodes of ontology include classic metabolic, regulatory, signaling, drug and disease pathways. Ontology allows for standardized annotation of rat. Serves as vehicle to connect between genes and ontology reports, between reports and interactive pathway diagrams, between pathways that directly connect to one another within diagram or between pathways that in some fashion are globally related in pathway suites and suite networks.

Proper citation: Rat Strain Ontology (RRID:SCR_003449) Copy   


http://www.violinet.org/ovae/

A biomedical ontology in the area of vaccine adverse events aimed to represent and analyze various vaccine-specific adverse events. OVAE is an extension of the Ontology of Adverse Events (OAE) and the Vaccine Ontology (VO).

Proper citation: Ontology of Vaccine Adverse Events (RRID:SCR_003442) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003563

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://ncit.nci.nih.gov/

A reference terminology and core biomedical ontology for NCI that covers approximately 100,000 key biomedical concepts with terms, codes, definitions, and more than 200,000 inter-concept relationships. It is the reference terminology for NCI, NCI Metathesaurus and NCI informatics infrastructure covering vocabulary for clinical care, translational and basic research, and public information and administrative activities. It includes broad coverage of the cancer domain, including cancer related diseases, findings and abnormalities; anatomy; agents, drugs and chemicals; genes and gene products and so on. In certain areas, like cancer diseases and combination chemotherapies, it provides the most granular and consistent terminology available. It combines terminology from numerous cancer research related domains, and provides a way to integrate or link these kinds of information together through semantic relationships. NCIt features: * Stable, unique codes for biomedical concepts; * Preferred terms, synonyms, definitions, research codes, external source codes, and other information; * Links to NCI Metathesaurus and other information sources; * Over 200,000 cross-links between concepts, providing formal logic-based definition of many concepts; * Extensive content integrated from NCI and other partners, much available as separate NCIt subsets * Updated frequently by a team of subject matter experts. NCIt is a widely recognized standard for biomedical coding and reference, used by a broad variety of public and private partners both nationally and internationally including the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium Terminology (CDISC), the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Federal Medication Terminologies (FMT), and the National Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP).

Proper citation: NCI Thesaurus (RRID:SCR_003563) Copy   


http://code.google.com/p/omrse/

An ontology covering the domain of social entities that are related to health care, such as demographic information (social entities for recording gender (but not sex) and marital status, for example) and the roles of various individuals and organizations (patient, hospital, etc.)

Proper citation: Ontology of Medically Related Social Entities (RRID:SCR_003439) Copy   


http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/MEDDRA

Ontology of Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities Terminology (MedDRA)

Proper citation: Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (RRID:SCR_003751) 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/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://www.ebi.ac.uk/efo/

An application focused ontology modelling the experimental factors in ArrayExpress and Gene Expression Atlas. It has been developed to increase the richness of the annotations that are currently made in the ArrayExpress repository, to promote consistent annotation, to facilitate automatic annotation and to integrate external data. The ontology describes cross-product classes from reference ontologies in area such as disease, cell line, cell type and anatomy. The methodology employed in the development of EFO involves construction of mappings to multiple existing domain specific ontologies, such as the Disease Ontology and Cell Type Ontology. This is achieved using a combination of automated and manual curation steps and the use of a phonetic matching algorithm. The ontology is evaluated with use cases from the ArrayExpress repository and ArrayExpress Atlas. You may also browse the EFO in the NCBO Bioportal. Term submissions are welcome.

Proper citation: Experimental Factor Ontology (RRID:SCR_003574) Copy   



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