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titleUseful Links




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titleICR Active Working Groups
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The Integrative Cancer Research Workspace is producing modular and interoperable tools and interfaces that provide for integration between biomedical informatics applications and data. This will ultimately enable translational and integrative research by providing for the integration of clinical and basic research data. The Workspace is developing a software-engineered, well-documented and validated biomedical informatics toolset for use throughout the research community.

Additional information is also found on the Molecular Analysis Knowledge Center site.

Recent News


Info
titleLife Sciences Domain Analysis Model

caBIG® Life Sciences Domain Analysis Model (LS DAM) v2.1 has been released. The LS DAM is a shared view of the semantics for Life Sciences, which includes hypothesis driven basic and pre-clinical research as well as discovery sciences. It is aligned, where appropriate, with the Clinical Sciences BRIDG model, which covers protocol driven clinical research. The LS DAM is a foundational component for achieving semantic interoperability among the various applications across caBIG® and is bound to the ISO 21090 data type standard.

The major changes in this release are described in the Release Summary and include:

  • Creation of a Life Sciences Scope Statement
  • Update to the Molecular Biology core component to promote consistent use of the model when dealing with physical entities and/or information about those entities
  • Expansion of Experiment Core(formerly called the Generic Assay model) to include ExperimentalParameters
  • Addition of the BRIDG aligned Performer role based class which was identified as a gap through analysis of Pathology Imaging Use Cases
  • Representation for biologic models by inclusion of classes for CellCulture, CellLine, MicrobiologicCulture, subSpeciesRank identified through analysis of Pathology Imaging Use Cases
  • Support for material compositions by addition of MaterialRelationship class (and removal of caNanoLab derived specializations of Material that can now be handled more elegantly)
  • Further development of the Container concept
  • Addition of attributes to the Software class
  • Common Biorepository Model mappings are documented and added as tags in the UML model

For a complete list of modifications and additions to the LS DAM v 2.1, please see the Release Notes and Model Documentation.

For those interested in viewing the LS DAM v2.1 model

For more information on the LS DAM see the LS DAM Wiki page.


Info
titleNanoParticle Ontology

We have released a new version of the NanoParticle Ontology(NPO). This version includes new terms that describe “scales of measurement” and nanomaterials. We made some modification to the nanomaterial branch and added new terms based on ISO terminology.

NPO RELEASE DOCUMENTS: To view the new release documents, please go to http://www.nano-ontology.org/documentation/version-release-notes/2011-02-12 .

NPO VISUALIZATION: To browse and visualize the NPO, please go to http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/npo .

NPO INCLUDED IN NCI METATHESAURUS: The NPO is now included in the NCI metathesaurus (NCIm), which can be accessed at http://ncimeta.nci.nih.gov/ .
The NCI metathesaurus contains about 3,600,000 terms from over 76 vocabularies, and these terms are mapped to about 1,400,000 biomedical concepts. Terms from multiple vocabularies that are mapped to a single biomedical concept allows the user to choose from the multiple vocabularies to annotate data. Simultaneously, this facilitates discovery of vocabularies unknown to the user. By the inclusion of NPO into the NCI metathesaurus, we expect that NPO accessibility and usage will be extended within the NCIm; NPO will add semantics into the NCIm; and that NCIm users will be able to take advantage of the knowledge provided by NPO.

NPO TERM SUGGESTION: The NCI term suggestion application allows for users to suggest terms for NPO. To suggest terms for NPO, you may use the NCI term suggestion application, available at: http://ncitermform.nci.nih.gov/


Teleconference Materials

The meeting Date is hyperlinked to the notes and hyperlinks in the Executive Summary are for specific presentations

Date

Executive Summary

February 23, 2011, 2-4 PM Eastern

Anton Nekrutenko and Daniel Blankenberg and of The Pennsylvania State University gave a presentation on Galaxy, an open-source next generation sequence (NGS) analysis software system. It addresses the need to empower the scientists without access to extensive infrastructure to do the analysis. Galaxy is a free web service, and has a plethora of analysis tools and has workflow generation capabilities
Stacey Harper gave a briefing on nano-TAB, a general purpose framework that provides a standard means to communicate nanomaterial data and metadata. The needs the data exchange format addresses and an overview of the file structure were discussed.

February 14, 2011, 2-4 PM Eastern

caArray Users Meeting featured upcoming plugin architecture for support the addition of new parsers and data storage mechanisms.

January 26, 2011, 2-4 PM Eastern

Jenny Kelley, NCI Population Sciences, updated the community on caLIMS v2 new features. She also provided a thorough demonstration of the tool.
The details on the upcoming release of caB2B in March were presented by Baris Suzek of Georgetown University. The tool will assist Bioinformaticians and Researchers discover and collect data on the Grid.
Nano WG and LS SME WG each presented an overview and current goals to the community.

January 12, 2011, 2-4 PM Eastern

The ICR Workspace is hearing reports on activities for the last period.
Bob Freimuth discussed IRWG work on the LS DAM Updates and additions to the model will appear in the next release. Work on the portion of the model shared with HL7 Clinical Genomics Working Group is extending the generic assay core to include concepts for gene variation.
Dennis Thomas reported on the processes to integrate the NanoParticle Ontology into the NCI Metathesaurus. This expands NPO accessibility and brings more semantics into the NCImt.

November 10, 2010, 2-4 PM Eastern

Ken Smith from the Molecular Analysis Tools Knowledge Center presented an update on geWorkbench, which is a platform for integrated genomics. A demo involving data from an ovarian cancer study highlighted features from the last two releases including BLAST tools, gene annotation, GO viewer, pathway visualization tools and more.

October 27, 2010, 2-4 PM Eastern

Ulli Wagner presented the website eMICE: electronic Models Information, Communication, and Education. It is a communication tool for the NCI Mouse Models of Human Cancers Consortium (MMHCC). Currently the program has a strong focus on education and the website was constructed to reach the broad spectrum of general audience to researcher. Mukesh Sharma reported in on the recent HL7 Meeting. He gave a review of Clinical Genomics working group activities in the three different tracks. He reported in on the discussion of the generic assay model which was developed as part of a caBIG ICR Information Representation Working Group collaboration with HLy Clinical Genomics Working Group.

October 12, 2010, 2-4 PM Eastern

Rashmi Srinivasa polled the workspace on interest in generic assay management. She provided an update on caArray which included features anticipating handling next generation sequencing data such as: the ability to handle fastq and BAM/SAM files, the ability to move and store large volumes of data. There were also security and technology stack related updated. Rashmi also presented Annotare which provides templates and tools to annotate MAGE-TAB experiments.
Raghu Chintalapati reviewed the SAIF and ECCF Implementation in NCI CBIIT. SAIF is comprised of frameworks to help provide working interoperability. There are four frameworks or grammars (information, behavior, governance, ECCF) and an implementation guide is being written to describe the CBIIT operationalization of SAIF. ECCF is a framework for service specifications and has five viewpoints represented (enterprise, information, computational, engineering and technology). A key component of specifications is modeling a service at different levels of abstraction: conceptual, platform independent, platform specific, implementation.

September 8, 2010, 2-4 PM Eastern

Karen Ketchum provided an overview of caIntegrator, a tool that provides the ability to develop web portal without software skills and allows you to import your data and query it. NCI hosts 5 studies in the caIntegrator platform. Newest features include enhancements to subject annotation interface, list management, upgraded connectivity to the NBIA, external links, expanded microarray platform support and copy number analysis capabilities. The call was closed out with ICR Working Group Reports (LS SMEs, Nano WG, IRWG).

August 25, 2010, 2-4 PM Eastern

Jenny Kelley presented the features and functionalities under development for caLIMS2. The purpose of the caLIMS2 project is to create a Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) that is interoperable within established caBIG® standards and guidelines and will track a complete laboratory workflow that uses materials from a specimen management service (e.g. caTissue) to generate experimental results for one of the caBIG® data management services (e.g. caArray). Core LIMS functions include the management of personnel, equipment, lab supplies and reagents, samples, laboratory workflow and experimentally derived metadata and data. caLIMS2 will complete the caBIG® bench to bed model by bridging the gap between biospecimen repositories, data repositories and analysis tools. Stephen Goldstein provided the Workspace with a demo on JIRA which is the NCI CBIIT's new issue tracking and project management tool. External users can log into JIRA to create issues and feature requests for specific products. Product teams can use JIRA to manage their development cycles. Testing teams can use JIRA to manage their testing efforts. And the Program team can use JIRA to create reports around issue lifecycles and development progress.

August 11, 2010, 2-4 PM Eastern

Liz Hahn-Dantona of the EVS team demonstrated how to access and use the NCI term browser, NCI thesaurus and NCI Metathesaurus. She described content in various tabs and pointed out features of interest. In preparation for the caBIG® Annual Meeting, Dr. Robert Freimuth created a 508 compliant presentation. He offered many helpful hints and his lively demonstration showed just how easy it is to create compliant presentations using layouts and alt text. Rashmi Srinivasa gave an overview of caArray. The caArray users meeting is now held in the ICR WS calls. Current features and those being added in the next release features were highlighted, including support for next generation sequencing experiments files FASTQ and BAM.

Looking for older notes?  Access ICR Meeting Notes Archive  

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