| Gene Ontology Consortium (2002). Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research, 11, 1425 -- 1433. |
....vocabulary for the description of genes and gene products. Currently, efforts are underway to imcorporate GO into UMLS. GO s compilers have endeavored to develop a standardized cross species biological vocabulary that can be used by multiple databases to annotate them in a consistent way [3,4,5]. As of June 2003, GO takes the form of a list of some 14,000 common biological terms together with text intended to convey definitions of many of the terms listed. Terms are organized in parent child hierarchies, indicating that one term is more general than another. Additional information is ....
Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology Resource: Design and Implementation. Genome Res. 2001; 11: 1425-1433
....the variants are identified by String Unique Identifiers (SUIs) In the 2001 UMLS there are 1,728,075 SUIs. The purpose of the Gene Ontology is to develop a coded, structured vocabulary for molecular function, biological processes, and cellular components that can be used across all species [10]. A unique text string, known as a GO term, represents each GO concept, which is in turn referenced by a unique accession number (GOID) Significantly, the component subvocabularies are independent of the associations between specific gene products and GO terms, leading to flexibility and ....
Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology Resource: Design and Implementation. Gen Res. 2001;11(8):1425-1433.
....the genes become essential information. In this context, it is fundamental that the knowledge representation systems supporting, for example, knowledge discovery provide an accurate representation of the roles and functions in the biomedical domain. Knowledge resources include GeneOntology TM (GO) [1], which focuses on genomics, and the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS ) 2] which covers the whole biomedical domain. Representing roles has been a central issue in conceptual modeling, e.g. 3] While taxonomies of concepts (is a hierarchies) organize things according to their ....
The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Res 2001; 11(8): 1425-1433
....[14] the Protein Information Resource (PIR) 15] the Protein Research Foundation [http: www.prf.or. jp ] the Taxonomy database [http: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Taxonomy ] LocusLink database [10] Conserved Domain Database (CDD) 16] The Gene Ontology (GO) vocabulary for functional annotation [17] is also included. 6 The primary key for all the SeqHound tables is the GenInfo (GI) identifier. GI identifiers are integers and are guaranteed to be unique within NCBI data space, hence providing a very reliable set of primary keys for the SeqHound database. To facilitate linking between ....
The Gene Ontology Consortium.: Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Res 2001, 11: 1425-1433.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. 2001. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Res 11(8): 1425 -- 1433.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: Design and implementation. Genome Res, 11:1425--1433, 2001.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource:design and implementation. Genome Res 2001,11(8):1425-1433
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research, 11:1425--1433, 2001.
....cell biology, toxicology, chemistry, and clinical sciences; thus standard vocabularies are mandatory for such integrated efforts. GO has been used as controlled vocabularies for data integration for both academic and commercial databases [5 8, 17] albeit, which GO is not intended to serve [2, 4]. Gene Ontology (GO) rooted on the Address correspondence to this author at the Compugen, Inc. 7 Center Drive, Suite 9, Jamesburg, NJ 08831, USA; Tel: 609 655 5105; Fax: 609655 5114; E mail: han cgen.com evolutional sequence and functional conservation of genes and gene products across all ....
.... Annotation The utility of GO depends not only on the construction of GO, but also on the association of GO with specific gene products (GO annotation) 1 4] Model organism databases [for example, 5 8] and others provide GO annotations based on computational translations, and or manual curation [2 4]. About a dozen evidence codes , specified by GO Consortium, are used to indicate how and based on what evidence the GO annotations for specific gene products are made [2, 3] The evidence code IEA , inferred from electronic annotation , indicates that computational approaches are used, and no ....
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology Resource: Design and Implementation. Genome Res., 2001, 11: 1425-1433.
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research 2001; 11:1425-33.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium, "Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation" Genome Res. 11, 1425 (2001)
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Gene Ontology Consortium (2002). Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research, 11, 1425 -- 1433.
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Gene Ontology Consortium (2001) Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation, Genome Res, 8, 1425-1433.
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Gene Ontology Consortium (2002). Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research, 11, 1425 -- 1433.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Res 2001; 11 (8): 1425-33. Correspondence to: Joyce A. Mitchell, Ph.D. 325 Clark Hall Department of Health Management and Informatics
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Res 2001;11(8):1425-33. AMIA 2003 Symposium Proceedings - Page 936
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology resource: Design and implementation. Genome Research, 11(8):1425--1433, 2001.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research, 11(8):1425--1433, 2001.
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology Resource: Design and Implementation. Genome Research, 11:1425-- 1433, 2001.
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology Resource: Design and Implementation. Genome Res. 11: 1425-1433, 2001.
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology resource: Design and implementation. Genome Research, 11(8):1425--1433, 2001.
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology resource: Design and implementation. Genome Research, 11(8):1425--1433, 2001.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research, 11(8):1425--1433, 2001.
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Research 2001;11(8):1425-- 33.
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THE GENE ONTOLOGY CONSORTIUM. Creating the gene ontology resource: Design and implementation. Genome Research, 11:1425--1433, 2001.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Res 2001; 11 (8): 1425-33. Correspondence to: Joyce A. Mitchell, Ph.D. 325 Clark Hall Department of Health Management and Informatics
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Gene Ontology Consortium. Creating the Gene Ontology resource: Design and implementation. Genome Res. 2001; 11: 1425-1433.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium (2001) Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation. Genome Res., 11, 1425--1433.
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The Gene Ontology Consortium. "Creating the gene ontology resource: design and implementation" Genome Res. 11(8), 1425-1433 (2001).
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