Back to Search Start Over

A Simple Standard for Sharing Ontological Mappings (SSSOM)

Authors :
Nicolas Matentzoglu
James P Balhoff
Susan M Bello
Chris Bizon
Matthew Brush
Tiffany J Callahan
Christopher G Chute
William D Duncan
Chris T Evelo
Davera Gabriel
John Graybeal
Alasdair Gray
Benjamin M Gyori
Melissa Haendel
Henriette Harmse
Nomi L Harris
Ian Harrow
Harshad B Hegde
Amelia L Hoyt
Charles T Hoyt
Dazhi Jiao
Ernesto Jiménez-Ruiz
Simon Jupp
Hyeongsik Kim
Sebastian Koehler
Thomas Liener
Qinqin Long
James Malone
James A McLaughlin
Julie A McMurry
Sierra Moxon
Monica C Munoz-Torres
David Osumi-Sutherland
James A Overton
Bjoern Peters
Tim Putman
Núria Queralt-Rosinach
Kent Shefchek
Harold Solbrig
Anne Thessen
Tania Tudorache
Nicole Vasilevsky
Alex H Wagner
Christopher J Mungall
Bioinformatica
RS: NUTRIM - R1 - Obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular health
Source :
Database-the journal of biological databases and curation, Database-The Journal of Biological Databases and Curation, 2022:035. Oxford University Press, Database, 2022. OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2022.

Abstract

Despite progress in the development of standards for describing and exchanging scientific information, the lack of easy-to-use standards for mapping between different representations of the same or similar objects in different databases poses a major impediment to data integration and interoperability. Mappings often lack the metadata needed to be correctly interpreted and applied. For example, are two terms equivalent or merely related? Are they narrow or broad matches? Are they associated in some other way? Such relationships between the mapped terms are often not documented, leading to incorrect assumptions and making them hard to use in scenarios that require a high degree of precision (such as diagnostics or risk prediction). Also, the lack of descriptions of how mappings were done makes it hard to combine and reconcile mappings, particularly curated and automated ones. The Simple Standard for Sharing Ontological Mappings (SSSOM) addresses these problems by: 1. Introducing a machine-readable and extensible vocabulary to describe metadata that makes imprecision, inaccuracy and incompleteness in mappings explicit. 2. Defining an easy to use table-based format that can be integrated into existing data science pipelines without the need to parse or query ontologies, and that integrates seamlessly with Linked Data standards. 3. Implementing open and community-driven collaborative workflows designed to evolve the standard continuously to address changing requirements and mapping practices. 4. Providing reference tools and software libraries for working with the standard. In this paper, we present the SSSOM standard, describe several use cases, and survey some existing work on standardizing the exchange of mappings, with the goal of making mappings Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR). The SSSOM specification is at http://w3id.org/sssom/spec.<br />Comment: Corresponding author: Christopher J. Mungall

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17580463
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Database-the journal of biological databases and curation, Database-The Journal of Biological Databases and Curation, 2022:035. Oxford University Press, Database, 2022. OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1d79ccec144cafb9d7bf00551d34520d