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The Bioschemas community (http://bioschemas.org) is a loose collaboration formed by a wide range of life science resource providers and informaticians. The community is developing profiles over Schema.org to enable life science resources such as data about a specific protein, sample, or training event, to be more discoverable on the web. While the content of well-known resources such as Uniprot (for protein data) are easily discoverable, there is a long tail of specialist resources that would benefit from embedding Schema.org markup in a standardised approach.
The community have developed twelve profiles for specific types of life science resources (http://bioschemas.org/specifications/), with another six at an early draft stage. For each profile, a set of use cases have been identified. These typically focus on search, but several facilitate lightweight data exchange to support data aggregators such as Identifiers.org, FAIRsharing.org, and BioSamples. The next stage of the development of a profile consists of mapping the terms used in the use cases to existing properties in Schema.org and domain ontologies. The properties are then prioritised in order to support the use cases, with a minimal set of about six properties identified, along with a larger set of recommended and optional properties. For each property, an expected cardinality is defined and where appropriate, object values are specified from controlled vocabularies. Before a profile is finalised, it must first be demonstrated that resources can deploy the markup.
In this talk, we will outline the progress that has been made by the Bioschemas Community in a single year through three hackathon events. We will discuss the processes followed by the Bioschemas Community to foster collaboration, and highlight the benefits and drawbacks of using open Google documents and spreadsheets to support the community develop the profiles. We will conclude by summarising future opportunities and directions for the community.
The Bioschemas community (http://bioschemas.org) is a loose collaboration formed by a wide range of life science resource providers and informaticians. The community is developing profiles over Schema.org to enable life science resources such as data about a specific protein, sample, or training event, to be more discoverable on the web. While the content of well-known resources such as Uniprot (for protein data) are easily discoverable, there is a long tail of specialist resources that would benefit from embedding Schema.org markup in a standardised approach.
The community have developed twelve profiles for specific types of life science resources (http://bioschemas.org/specifications/), with another six at an early draft stage. For each profile, a set of use cases have been identified. These typically focus on search, but several facilitate lightweight data exchange to support data aggregators such as Identifiers.org, FAIRsharing.org, and BioSamples. The next stage of the development of a profile consists of mapping the terms used in the use cases to existing properties in Schema.org and domain ontologies. The properties are then prioritised in order to support the use cases, with a minimal set of about six properties identified, along with a larger set of recommended and optional properties. For each property, an expected cardinality is defined and where appropriate, object values are specified from controlled vocabularies. Before a profile is finalised, it must first be demonstrated that resources can deploy the markup.
In this talk, we will outline the progress that has been made by the Bioschemas Community in a single year through three hackathon events. We will discuss the processes followed by the Bioschemas Community to foster collaboration, and highlight the benefits and drawbacks of using open Google documents and spreadsheets to support the community develop the profiles. We will conclude by summarising future opportunities and directions for the community.
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