Back to Search Start Over

Prevention of data duplication for high throughput sequencing repositories

Authors :
J. Seth Strattan
Carrie A. Davis
Forrest Y. Tanaka
Benjamin C. Hitz
J. Michael Cherry
Keenan Graham
Jean M. Davidson
Jason A. Hilton
Idan Gabdank
Kathrina C. Onate
Stuart R. Miyasato
Otto Jolanki
Timothy R. Dreszer
Esther T. Chan
Aditi K. Narayanan
Ulugbek K. Baymuradov
Cricket A. Sloan
Source :
Database: The Journal of Biological Databases and Curation
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2018.

Abstract

Prevention of unintended duplication is one of the ongoing challenges many databases have to address. Working with high-throughput sequencing data, the complexity of that challenge increases with the complexity of the definition of a duplicate. In a computational data model, a data object represents a real entity like a reagent or a biosample. This representation is similar to how a card represents a book in a paper library catalog. Duplicated data objects not only waste storage, they can mislead users into assuming the model represents more than the single entity. Even if it is clear that two objects represent a single entity, data duplication opens the door to potential inconsistencies between the objects since the content of the duplicated objects can be updated independently, allowing divergence of the metadata associated with the objects. Analogously to a situation in which a catalog in a paper library would contain by mistake two cards for a single copy of a book. If these cards are listing simultaneously two different individuals as current book borrowers, it would be difficult to determine which borrower (out of the two listed) actually has the book. Unfortunately, in a large database with multiple submitters, unintended duplication is to be expected. In this article, we present three principal guidelines the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) Portal follows in order to prevent unintended duplication of both actual files and data objects: definition of identifiable data objects (I), object uniqueness validation (II) and de-duplication mechanism (III). In addition to explaining our modus operandi, we elaborate on the methods used for identification of sequencing data files. Comparison of the approach taken by the ENCODE Portal vs other widely used biological data repositories is provided. Database URL: https://www.encodeproject.org/

Details

ISSN :
17580463
Volume :
2018
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Database
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a7e6bdaa33cadffb138b682674f16b25
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/database/bay008