kei cheung wrote:

Based on my limited experience, a person in the life science and healthcare context can be considered as a subject or patient (which
can be a subclass of person). Of course, there are other roles a
person can play (e.g., doctors, researchers, and authors). For
genetic studies, a group of subjects/indviduals may be a
family/pedigree. In this case, relationships among these  family
members may include Father_of, Mother_of, Child_of, etc. Other types

Hi Kei,

In addition, I think there is another side as well: science community
people, having a role (student, teacher, director of), relations with
fields of study ( immunologist, studies TLR signalling), relations with
events and scientific production ( has published, has organized
conference ), relations with other people ( works with, supervisor of,
... ).

I vaguely remember at least one similar case of ontology, does anyone
have further details?

Cheers.

--

===============================================================================
Marco Brandizi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://gca.btbs.unimib.it/brandizi


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