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2018, PLOS Computational Biology
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4 pages
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Back in March 2012, PLOS Computational Biology launched its 'Topic Pages' project as a way to help fill important gaps in Wikipedia's coverage of computational biology content and to credit authors for their contributions. Topic Pages are written in the style of a Wikipedia article and are openly and publicly peer reviewed on the PLOS Wiki before being published in our PLOS journals, with a second, editable version posted to Wikipedia. Six years on, PLOS Computational Biology has published 11 Topic Pages covering a good range of subjects, from the Hypercycle to Approximate Bayesian Computation. The published articles have been widely viewed on Wikipedia as well as in the journal and well received by the community. We are welcoming submissions for further PLOS Computational Biology Topic Pages. We are looking for topics in computational biology that are of interest to our readership, the broader scientific community, and the public at large and that are not yet covered or insufficiently covered (i.e., exist as a 'stub') in Wikipedia. Last year, PLOS Genetics joined the Topic Pages initiative, as detailed in this blog post. We are also exploring how the Topic Pages approach could be extended to include Wikidata, the community-curated database connecting concepts covered in any Wikipedia article with the Semantic Web [1]. For instance, data from more and more research-related databases are being integrated with Wikidata or its semantic core, Wikibase. This creates the need to formalize data models: How should concepts like a disease outbreak, a cell-cycle checkpoint, a sequencer, biomineralization, or a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data set be modelled in Wikidata or Wikibase? Conversely, what workflows allow us to collect information about such concepts in Wikidata, to interlink it with related information, to validate it, and to keep it up to date? Or, how can the data from Wikidata be explored or put to use in other contexts relevant to computational biology? We are working on establishing the editorial workflows to handle such Wikidata-focused Topic Pages and would welcome submissions to test these waters. For some inspiration, we suggest taking a look at Wikidata-based tools for browsing microbial genomes [2], scholarly publications [3], or software and file formats [4]. The Author Guidelines for Wikipedia-focused Topic Pages are available here. If you've noticed a gap in Wikipedia's coverage of particular computational biology topics, we want to hear from you! Please send ideas for Topic Pages to [email protected].
2015
Open biological data are distributed over many resources making them challenging to integrate, to update and to disseminate quickly. Wikidata is a growing, open community database which can serve this purpose and also provides tight integration with Wikipedia. In order to improve the state of biological data, facilitate data management and dissemination, we imported all human and mouse genes, and all human and mouse proteins into Wikidata. In total, 59 721 human genes and 73 355 mouse genes have been imported from NCBI and 27 306 human proteins and 16 728 mouse proteins have been imported from the Swissprot subset of UniProt. As Wikidata is open and can be edited by anybody, our corpus of imported data serves as the starting point for integration of further data by scientists, the Wikidata community and citizen scientists alike. The first use case for these data is to populate Wikipedia Gene Wiki infoboxes directly from Wikidata with the data integrated above. This enables immediate updates of the Gene Wiki infoboxes as soon as the data in Wikidata are modified. Although Gene Wiki pages are currently only on the English language version of Wikipedia, the multilingual nature of Wikidata allows for usage of the data we imported in all 280 different language Wikipedias. Apart from the Gene Wiki infobox use case, a SPARQL endpoint and exporting functionality to several standard formats (e.g. JSON, XML) enable use of the data by scientists. In summary, we created a fully open and extensible data resource for human and mouse molecular biology and biochemistry data. This resource enriches all the Wikipedias with structured information and serves as a new linking hub for the biological semantic web.
PLoS Biology, 2008
On the Move to …, 2006
Large knowledge bases integrating different domains can provide a foundation for new applications in biology such as data mining or automated reasoning. The traditional approach to the construction of such knowledge bases is manual and therefore extremely time consuming. The ubiquity of the internet now makes large-scale community collaboration for the construction of knowledge bases, such as the successful online encyclopedia "Wikipedia", possible.
Nucleic acids research, 2012
Here, we describe the development of WikiPathways (http://www.wikipathways.org), a public wiki for pathway curation, since it was first published in 2008. New features are discussed, as well as developments in the community of contributors. New features include a zoomable pathway viewer, support for pathway ontology annotations, the ability to mark pathways as private for a limited time and the availability of stable hyperlinks to pathways and the elements therein. WikiPathways content is freely available in a variety of formats such as the BioPAX standard, and the content is increasingly adopted by external databases and tools, including Wikipedia. A recent development is the use of WikiPathways as a staging ground for centrally curated databases such as Reactome. WikiPathways is seeing steady growth in the number of users, page views and edits for each pathway. To assess whether the community curation experiment can be considered successful, here we analyze the relation between use and contribution, which gives results in line with other wiki projects. The novel use of pathway pages as supplementary material to publications, as well as the addition of tailored content for research domains, is expected to stimulate growth further.
EMBnet.journal, 2012
Motivation and Objectives The rapid growth of the scholarly literature makes the management and curation of the available information a labor-intensive and time-consuming task for researchers, during which significant knowledge can be easily missed. To address
Nucleic Acids Research, 2007
xanthusBase (http://www.xanthusbase.org) is the official model organism database (MOD) for the social bacterium Myxococcus xanthus. In many respects, M.xanthus represents the pioneer model organism (MO) for studying the genetic, biochemical, and mechanistic basis of prokaryotic multicellularity, a topic that has garnered considerable attention due to the significance of biofilms in both basic and applied microbiology research. To facilitate its utility, the design of xanthusBase incorporates open-source software, leveraging the cumulative experience made available through the Generic Model Organism Database (GMOD) project, MediaWiki (http://www.mediawiki.org), and dictyBase (http://www.dictybase.org), to create a MOD that is both highly useful and easily navigable. In addition, we have incorporated a unique Wikipedia-style curation model which exploits the internet's inherent interactivity, thus enabling M.xanthus and other myxobacterial researchers to contribute directly toward the ongoing genome annotation.
BMC bioinformatics, 2009
Results We have developed the BOWiki, a web-based system that includes a biological core ontology. The core ontology provides background knowledge about biological types and relations. Against this background, an automated reasoner assesses the consistency of new information added to the knowledge base. The system provides a platform for research communities to integrate information and annotate data collaboratively.
Readers of Kālidāsa's Abhijñānaśakuntala will remember the scene in which King Duṣyanta, in hot pursuit of an deer, is stopped by the following words (in the translation of Michael Coulson): "No, no Your Majesty! Don't kill him, he's a deer of the hermitage." (bho bho rājan āśramamṛgo 'yaṃ na hantavyo na hantavyaḥ). It turns out that Duṣyanta, without realizing it, has come close to the āśrama, here translated hermitage, of Kaṇva where, we learn from these words, deer cannot be killed. The King is subsequently invited to visit the āśrama, and he does not fail to recognize the signs:
Rhetoric of Health & Medicine, 2024
This article develops "menstrual methodologies" for ungendering menstruation and attending to the chronic pain and dysphoria present in menstrual embodiment. Specifically, it unfolds from the experiences of a nonbinary person with undiagnosed endometriosis through developing a series of menstrual methodologies, including ungendering menstruation; thinking with pain through crip time, crankiness, and autoethnography; and a justice-based approach to menstruation; followed by an application of these methodologies to a recent case study. Following on an autobiographical prelude, I begin with an introduction to menstrual methodologies and next outline each one. Menstrual methodologies, I argue, provide a toolkit not only for those who study menstruation and menstruators but for researchers across disciplines who are interested in questions of gender, embodiment, pain, medical science, justice, and disability.
Il Manifesto (8 June 2018), 2018
Participation, Research and Learning in the Performing Arts Symposium on the 6th May 2011, Centre for Creative Collaboration, London. Royal Holloway, University of London, and PALATINE Dance, Drama and Music., 2011
Actas del Décimo Tercer Congreso Nacional y Quinto Congreso Internacional Hispanoamericano de Historia de la costrucción, 2024
Doutrina Temática Digital, ano 5, n. 17, setembro, 2024
International Labor and Working Class History, 2023
Kufa Journal for Nursing Sciences
Optics Express, 2013
Pan African Medical Journal, 2017
Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 2018
Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, 2004
Nuclear and Particle Physics Proceedings, 2016