4.6 Article

S3DB core: a framework for RDF generation and management in bioinformatics infrastructures

Journal

BMC BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-11-387

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Center for Clinical and Translational Sciences of the Texas Medical Center at Houston under NIH (CTSA) [UL1RR024148]
  2. National Cancer Institute [1U24CA143883-01]
  3. European Union
  4. Portuguese Science and Technology foundation [PTDC/EIAEIA/105245/2008, PTDC/EEAACR/69530/2006, SFRH/BD/45963/2008]
  5. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BD/45963/2008] Funding Source: FCT

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Background: Biomedical research is set to greatly benefit from the use of semantic web technologies in the design of computational infrastructure. However, beyond well defined research initiatives, substantial issues of data heterogeneity, source distribution, and privacy currently stand in the way towards the personalization of Medicine. Results: A computational framework for bioinformatic infrastructure was designed to deal with the heterogeneous data sources and the sensitive mixture of public and private data that characterizes the biomedical domain. This framework consists of a logical model build with semantic web tools, coupled with a Markov process that propagates user operator states. An accompanying open source prototype was developed to meet a series of applications that range from collaborative multi-institution data acquisition efforts to data analysis applications that need to quickly traverse complex data structures. This report describes the two abstractions underlying the S3DB-based infrastructure, logical and numerical, and discusses its generality beyond the immediate confines of existing implementations. Conclusions: The emergence of the web as a computer requires a formal model for the different functionalities involved in reading and writing to it. The S3DB core model proposed was found to address the design criteria of biomedical computational infrastructure, such as those supporting large scale multi-investigator research, clinical trials, and molecular epidemiology.

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