Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAngelica Bradford Modified over 8 years ago
1
Uniform Resource Layer Anita Bandrowski, Ph. D. Neuroscience Information Framework University of California, San Diego
2
Cataloging Biological Resources http://neuinfo.org Databases Tissue banks Software tools Services
3
A resource catalog: Must have a reasonable account of what is out there http://neuinfo.org Image repository Database Atlas NITRC Harvard Nencki Inst.
4
How are resources added to the registry? Curators Assign structured metadata to each entry, the metadata is based on a harmonized resource type ontology
5
Can we mine relationships between resources? http://neuinfo.org Human annotations give a different graph of relationships Text mining gives a picture of the most used resources PDB
6
A shared resource registry http://neuinfo.org NIF
7
Social Network of Resources? 3DVC – 182 Force11 – 88 Monarch – 88 OneMind – 609 GeneOntology Tools - 140 1 6 1 2 12 6 Which resources are shared by multiple communities? Structured data allows us to answer questions easily http://neurolex.org/
8
How do you keep a registry current? http://neuinfo.org
9
BUT DATABASES CAN HAVE NEW DATA EVERY DAY
10
Each resource implements a different model, which works well for the resource Connectome databases http://neuinfo.org
11
Uniform resource layer also means uniform data access http://neuinfo.org Luis Marenco, Rixin Wang; Yale
12
>200 data sources >390M data records >1.5M links to Articles >200 data sources >390M data records >1.5M links to Articles
13
Data are divided into types http://neuinfo.org
14
Uniform search http://neuinfo.org
15
Data about the subthalamus http://neuinfo.org
16
The Brain and its’ data Ontologies provide a semantic framework for understanding data/resource landscape Data sources included in NIF -Complete list: http://disco.neuinfo.orghttp://disco.neuinfo.org -Services: http://neuinfo.org/developershttp://neuinfo.org/developers Striatum Hypothalamus Olfactory bulb Cerebral cortex Brain Brain region Data source Vadim Astakhov, Kepler Workflow Engine
17
LET’S PLAY A GAME
18
What is this? http://neuinfo.org
19
Homunculus http://neuinfo.org
20
Homunculus *Careful mapping of the entire somatosensory cortex yields a representation of the amount of area devoted to sensing each body region. *From the homunculus we learn that humans pay attention to the lips, hands and genitals. http://neuinfo.org
21
Each animal has a set of body regions that it is particularly concerned with http://neuinfo.org
22
Is there a data homunculus? If so, how can we know it? http://neuinfo.org
23
Medial lemniscus of midbrain Habenulo-interpeduncular tract of midbrain Commissural nucleus of vagus nerve Medullary raphe nuclear complex Dorsal longitudinal fasciculus of medulla Trochlear nerve root Spinothalamic tract of midbrain Superior cerebellar peduncle of midbrain Medial longitudinal fasciculus of midbrain Central tegmental tract of midbrain Dorsal longitudinal fasciculus of midbrain Vagus nerve root Accessory nerve root White matter of the cerebellar cortex Oculomotor nerve root Brain Striatum Amygdala Thalamus Cerebellar cortex Cerebellum Hypothalamus Forebrain Midbrain Substantia nigra Third ventricle Ventral tegmental area Pons Medulla oblongata Cochlear nuclear complex Most popularLeast popular Brain region popularity http://neuinfo.org
24
Which brain regions have most annotations? Sum per Level Sum for Major Brain Region http://neuinfo.org
25
Which data source has any data for brain regions BAMS, BioNot, BrainInfo, BrainMaps BAMS, BioNot, BrainInfo, BrainMaps Funded Grants Connectivity OMIM MGI http://neuinfo.org
26
Why don’t you have my database of Commissural nucleus of vagus nerve images? Please register them with NIF – http://neuinfo.org/cindy.htm http://neuinfo.org/cindy.htm E-mail abandrowski@ucsd.edu or info@neuinfo.orgabandrowski@ucsd.edu info@neuinfo.org Poster # OP05 or Demo session D19 http://neuinfo.org
27
Maryann Martone, PI
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.