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Discovery informatics in biological and biomedical sciences: research challenges and opportunities.

Authors :
Honavar V
Source :
Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing. Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing [Pac Symp Biocomput] 2015, pp. 482.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

New discoveries in biological, biomedical and health sciences are increasingly being driven by our ability to acquire, share, integrate and analyze, and construct and simulate predictive models of biological systems. While much attention has focused on automating routine aspects of management and analysis of "big data", realizing the full potential of "big data" to accelerate discovery calls for automating many other aspects of the scientific process that have so far largely resisted automation: identifying gaps in the current state of knowledge; generating and prioritizing questions; designing studies; designing, prioritizing, planning, and executing experiments; interpreting results; forming hypotheses; drawing conclusions; replicating studies; validating claims; documenting studies; communicating results; reviewing results; and integrating results into the larger body of knowledge in a discipline. Against this background, the PSB workshop on Discovery Informatics in Biological and Biomedical Sciences explores the opportunities and challenges of automating discovery or assisting humans in discovery through advances (i) Understanding, formalization, and information processing accounts of, the entire scientific process; (ii) Design, development, and evaluation of the computational artifacts (representations, processes) that embody such understanding; and (iii) Application of the resulting artifacts and systems to advance science (by augmenting individual or collective human efforts, or by fully automating science).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2335-6936
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing. Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing
Accession number :
25592607