Difference between revisions of "POC Conf. Call 7-31-12"
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* PSDS invited paper- for Special Issue on "Functional Genomics and Systems Biology in the Post Genomics Era" that will be published in 2013 in Physiologia Plantarum. | * PSDS invited paper- for Special Issue on "Functional Genomics and Systems Biology in the Post Genomics Era" that will be published in 2013 in Physiologia Plantarum. | ||
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+ | ''Do we know if this is the end of October or the beginning?'' | ||
''RW would like everyone to send her ideas as to what they would like to see in it.'' | ''RW would like everyone to send her ideas as to what they would like to see in it.'' |
Revision as of 18:52, 31 July 2012
POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Tuesday July 31st, 2012 10am PDT/1pm EDT
In attendance:
POC members: Laurel Cooper (OSU), Ramona Walls (NYBG), Justin Elser (OSU), Dennis Stevenson (NYBG), Pankaj Jaiswal (OSU)
Absent:Marie Alejandra Gandolfo (Cornell), Justin Preece (OSU), Chris Mungall (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab), Barry Smith (University at Buffalo, NY)
Collaborators: none
Streaming recording link: https://ontology.webex.com/ontology/ldr.php?AT=pb&SP=MC&rID=67050932&rKey=bc60932af8fc7983
Download recording link: https://ontology.webex.com/ontology/lsr.php?AT=dw&SP=MC&rID=67050932&rKey=d3198c436914478b
Any changes or corrections (additions/deletions, etc) needed in the minutes from the POC_Conf._Call_7-3-12?
Back to POC Meetings Minutes
News since last meeting July 3rd
- Release #18 is out July_2012_Release
Two significant new terms have been added to help categorize the problematic plant structures such as fruit and seed, and their parts.
- multi-tissue plant structure (PO:0025496) has been added as a direct sub-class of plant structure (PO:0009011) and is the new parent term for fruit (PO:0009001), seed (PO:0009010), and plant organ (PO:0009008).
- cardinal part of multi-tissue plant structure (PO:0025498)- This term includes cardinal parts of plant organs such as leaf lamina (PO:0020039) or receptacle (PO:0009064), as well as parts of other multi-tissue plant structures, such as fruit distal end (PO:0008001) or arilloid (PO:0019022).
A new term, collective plant structure (PO:0025497), was created to describe collections of plant structures and to serve as parent term to collective plant organ structure (PO:0025007) and collective organ part structure (PO:0025269). Note that collective plant organ structure (PO:0025007) was formerly named "collective plant structure" (the same name as the new upper-level term), but was renamed for clarity.
We discussed the new terms and whether or not the names are appropriate or if they could be made less confusing. We should review the names and definitions and make sure the child terms such as anther are in the appropriate class.
- Please review the PO_Release_SOP_Page. I revised and updated for the most recent release, but it is good to make sure we have not missed anything.
- AJB paper is out! see link: Bio-ontologies
Need to post notices on PO home page and facebook and could send something out on po-announce as well.
- PAE paper is being revised-consolidated all the comments from everyone and updating to match the release. Will go out again to everyone this week.
- PSDS invited paper- for Special Issue on "Functional Genomics and Systems Biology in the Post Genomics Era" that will be published in 2013 in Physiologia Plantarum.
Do we know if this is the end of October or the beginning?
RW would like everyone to send her ideas as to what they would like to see in it.
Plans for the next release
Tentatively planned for October_2012_Release
Priorities for next release:
Continue major revision of PSDS
Focus on the revisions on the stages that have the most annotations:
PO:0007033 : whole plant development stage
> PO:0028002 : sporophyte development stage
>> PO:0007130 : sporophyte reproductive stage [46604]: (Some still have the numbers preceding them, others don't)
>>> PO:0007047 : 3 inflorescence detectable stage [29131]
>>>PO:0007016 : 4 flowering [28057]
>>>PO:0007042 : 5 fruit formation [31009]
>>>PO:0007010 : 6 ripening [37642]
>> PO:0007134 : sporophyte vegetative stage [60370]: (Some still have the numbers preceding them, others don't)
>>>PO:0007057 : 0 seed germination stage [29568]
>>>PO:0007112 : 1 main shoot growth stage [47411]
>>>PO:0007131 : seedling development stage [26673]
PO:0009012 : plant structure development stage:
> PO:0007615 : flower development stage [48067]
>PO:0001083 : inflorescence development stage [48067]
PO:0025339 : plant organ development stage [46618]
>PO:0001050 : leaf development stage [45968]
>PO:0007520 : root development stage [25208]
PO:0025338 : collective plant structure development stage [49645]
>PO:0007615 : flower development stage [48067]
file naming and which variations of the file to create for each release
Complete outstanding user requests/SF tracker items
See the list at: [[1]]
Update the Po webpages
- Which ones are top priority?
See: Plant_Ontology_Web_Site_Update:_Winter_2012
Meeting reports
ICBO 2012
Disease ontology
RW presented a paper on a plant disease extension of the Infectious Disease Ontology (IDOplant). The paper was well received, and there was a lot of discussion (after the talk) about how to model disease symptoms. The IDOplant manuscript defined "plant disase symptom", but did not include a term for it in the ontology. The Ontology for General Medical Science (OGMS) is planning to remove their term for symptom, for similar reasons -- a symptom can really be anything.
Symptoms should be modeled as dispositions. An infectious disease is a disposition, which is borne by some plant and has as a material basis some infectious disorder. As a result of having the infection, that plant also bears the disposition to undergo certain processes, which may lead to measurable/observable changes in the plant. For example, infection by a particular microbe results in the disposition to lose chlorophyll, which may lead to yellow leaves. Of course, the mechanisms could be modeled in even more detail, for example, at the molecular level. As dispositions, symptoms or signs are mechanistically linked to a disease, but it is never stated that every instance of the disease course will display a particular symptom. This way of modeling diseases and symptoms requires that we think carefully about the processes involved in a disease course, which is what we will need if we want to use ontologies to learn something new about diseases.
New tools for ontology editing
RW attended an OBI workshop while at IBCO. This included presentation of some of the tools being developed by Oliver He's lab. These may be of general interest to the PO curators.
- Ontobee: A web server aimed to facilitate ontology visualization, query, and development. This is already familiar to many people in the ontology community.
- Ontofox: An easy-to-use web-based tool for importing ontology terms using the MIREOT process.
- Ontodog: A web-based tool for generating community views of ontologies. Allows users to create subsets of an ontology with their own preferred term names. This could be very helpful for PO users who represent specific parts of the plant science community. RW: I haven't tried this one yet, so not sure how easy it is to use.
ASPB 2012
July 20 - 24, 2012 - Plant Biology 2012, Austin, TX
Link to meeting page: ASPB2012
Helped organize an Outreach booth- ASPB Plant Biology 2012 along with Gramene, TAIR, BAR, iPlant, PMN, Kbase. Many people came and talked with us about all the different projects and I got to talk to our collaborators a lot too.
Plant Informatics Workshop was held with TAIR, Gramene and PO : Saturday, July 21, 2012, 7:30 PM - 9:00 PM. About 53 people attended.
Upcoming meetings and Presentations 2012:
Anatomy Ontology Course at NESCent, July 30th- Aug 3rd, 2012
Link to: Anatomy Ontology course
Link to Course materials
This course aims to teach proper ontology design principles and practices such that anatomical interoperability across evolutionarily disparate taxa is achieved. It further seeks to promote community growth and adoption of ontology-based methods and tools. The subsequent benefit is in the form of shared access to the unique data store of each community (e.g. genetic, genomic, developmental, and evolutionary data).
Apply here: [2]
LM is attending
Online Ontology Workshops at The University at Buffalo
The University at Buffalo is pleased to announce two on-line tutorials in ontology:
1. Introduction to Protégé for absolute beginners:
Saturday and Sunday, August 11-12, 2012.
Faculty: Ron Rudnicki (CUBRC, Buffalo), Alan Ruttenberg (University at Buffalo), Barry Smith (University at Buffalo)
This course will provide an introduction to the Protégé 4.2 ontology editor. It will begin with a brief introduction to ontology building, and to the use and importance of ontologies. This will be followed by an introduction to the Web Ontology Language (OWL). The bulk of the course will consist of an interactive introduction to the use of Protégé in building an ontology. No background in the use of computer languages and programming is presupposed. All sessions will be highly interactive.
Saturday and Sunday, August 18-19, 2012
Faculty: Alan Ruttenberg and Barry Smith (University at Buffalo)
Basic Formal Ontology is currently being used by over 100 ontology-based research projects in biomedical informatics and increasingly in other fields. The tutorial will provide an introduction to the content and use of BFO in ontology development. Participants will acquire knowledge of the ontology and of its use as top-level ontology in multiple ontology development projects in a variety of fields. They will learn about the most recent developments in the new version 2.0 of the BFO ontology, including new formalizations of BFO in first-order logic and in OWL.
Both tutorials are also open for face-to-face participation.
PO/TO Crop Annotation Workshop at OSU
For more information see the wiki page: Plant_Ontology_and_Crop_Annotation_Workshop_OSU_2012
Dates: Sept. 13-15th
The focus of the workshop will be on mostly development stages and traits for the crop plants