Nice job of explaining what the bio-ontology work is and why it is important.

http://www.buffalo.edu/news/12675

NEWS RELEASE

For the Sake of Research and Patient Care, Scientists Must Find Common Language
Biomedical ontology conference shows how philosophers are helping this massive 
endeavor

Release Date: June 27, 2011
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- In July, hundreds of international scientists from dozens of 
biomedical fields will meet at the University at Buffalo seeking a common 
language with which to energize cross-disciplinary research.
The International Conference on Biomedical Ontology will take place July 26-30, 
and conference convener Barry Smith, PhD, says attendees have a common goal: to 
enable all of the data produced by the entire spectrum of life sciences to be 
easily retrieved and understood by those working in all biomedical fields, from 
the molecular to the global scale.
"It is a huge order," he says, "little understood by the general public and 
difficult to achieve, but absolutely necessary for the continued development of 
biomedical science. It promises benefits in some ways similar to those brought 
to physics by the standardization of units of measure in the 18th century."
The goal is so important, that Smith, an internationally-recognized medical 
ontologist, Julian Park Chair and SUNY Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at 
UB, has devoted his professional life to this endeavor.
The public may assume that when biomedical scientists talk, they use the same 
words to mean the same things. But as Smith points out, in different research 
fields, even such common terms as "pain," "gene," "blood" and "cancer" may have 
very different meanings as used in different contexts. With the exponential 
growth of biomedical data, this simple fact has enormous implications. It leads 
to incompatibilities that frequently confuse, halt cross-disciplinary research 
and severely limit communication among researchers.
"In order to advance science," he says, "it is crucial to successful biomedical 
research that researchers in various disciplines, from molecular biology to 
public health, who write in different languages and use discrete reporting 
schemes, accurately translate terms used by all systems in which they operate.
"Otherwise, meaning is lost. Information pertaining to research results cannot 
be found, in ways which can have devastating consequences to medical research," 
Smith says.
"Shared ontologies, which are agreed-upon systems of meaning are designed to 
prevent this from happening, to enhance knowledge among systems that could not 
otherwise talk to each other," he says.
"We not only need to develop and populate ontologies," Smith says, "but encode 
shared definitions in a way that enables computer programs to use them, and 
then promulgate our results to researchers throughout the world so that they 
understand this new knowledge and have functional access to it."
To these ends, this conference is one of a series initiated in 2009 to offer a 
forum for representatives of all major communities involved in the development 
and application of biomedical and related ontologies.
In addition to many scientific presentations, the conference will offer poster 
sessions, tutorials, workshops, and demonstrations of new software critical to 
translational research.
Among the issues under discussion this year will be techniques and technologies 
for collaborative ontology development, reasoning with biomedical ontologies, 
the evaluation of biomedical ontologies and how biomedical ontologies interact 
with the Semantic Web (i.e., the "web of data" that enables machines to 
understand the semantics, or meaning, of information on the World Wide Web).
Smith says presenters will consider these issues in connection with gene and 
cell research, biomedical imaging, biochemistry and drug discovery, biomedical 
investigations, experimentation, clinical trials, clinical and translational 
research, and development and anatomy
Keynote speakers will be Bernard de Bono, MD, PhD, of the European 
Bioinformatics Institute, and Roberto Rocha, MD, PhD, senior corporate manager 
for knowledge management and clinical decision support in the Clinical 
Informatics Research and Development (CIRD) group of Partners Healthcare and 
Harvard School of Medicine.
De Bono's talk on the "Virtual Physiological Human Project," will address 
efforts to bring together physiology and pharmacology modelers to develop 
uniform representation for anatomical structure and function by increasing the 
interoperability of clinical systems.
Rocha's talk, "Practical Applications of Ontologies in Clinical Systems," will 
address his work with Partners Healthcare and at the University of Utah 
(2000-08), where he led the design and implementation of a distributed data and 
knowledge management infrastructure to support clinical and translational 
research.
UB presenters include Werner Ceusters, MD, professor of psychiatry, UB School 
of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, and principal investigator on a new 
National Institutes of Health grant focused on an ontology for pain and related 
disability, mental health and quality of life. He will present a tutorial at 
the conference to illustrate how this developing ontology can help patients 
with chronic pain clearly and accurately express how they feel to the doctors 
and healthcare providers trying to understand and treat them.
Other UB presenters include, in addition to Smith, Alex Diehl of the Department 
of Neurology, Randall Dipert of the Department of Philosophy, Patrice Seyed of 
Computer Science, and Alan Ruttenberg of the School of Dental Medicine.
Further information, including the program and a list of the 150 participants 
registered thus far, can be found at http://icbo.buffalo.edu.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Joanne S. Luciano, PhD                            Rensselaer Polytechnic 
Institute 
Research Associate Professor                 110 8th Street, Winslow 2143
Tetherless World Constellation                Troy, NY 12180, USA 
Department of Computer Science            Email: jluci...@cs.rpi.edu
Office Tel. +1.518.276.4939                         Global Tel. +1.617.440.4364 
(skypeIn)
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