Difference between revisions of "Workshop on Ontology of Images"

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Revision as of 08:40, 12 January 2006

Agenda

Hotel

Participants

Some Relevant Links


Background

The National Center for Biomedical Ontology will host a two-day workshop focused on the ontology of (biomedical) images and imaging. The workshop will take place on March 24-25, 2006 in Stanford.

The goal of the workshop is to promote interoperability of biomedical image and imaging ontologies through the application of principles of sound ontology construction and through the coordination of current ontology development efforts in the imaging domain. One subsidiary goal is to ensure compatibility of image ontologies with ontologies of those biomedical entities which images represent. The workshop will include hands-on experiments directed towards building a biomedical image ontology on the basis of sample ontologies submitted by participants in advance.

The following topics will be addressed:

- coordination and integration of ontologies in the imaging domain

- ontologies for classification of images, image features, interpretations,

- the role of a reference ontology such as the FMA

- the use of common relations (along the lines advanced in the OBO Relation Ontology), including relations among images, features, interpretations, and the underlying reality

- use of ontologies in reasoning

- building an ontology of imaging tools and data, including issues related to the classification of imaging algorithms and to the potential uses of a tools ontology in supporting interoperability of bioinformatics software (in conjunction with the Software and Data Integration Working Group of the NIH Roadmap National Centers for Biomedical Computing).

The workshop is designed to be of value to all those involved in biocomputing in the imaging domain, including representatives of those NCBCs who use or develop imaging technologies. It has been made possible by financial support from GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and Language & Computing (L&C).

An agenda is provided here. Hotel and related information is provided here.

Participants

Yasser alSafadi (Philips Research)

Carol Bean (NCRR)

Bruce Bray (Utah)

William Bug (BIRN)

James A Butler (GlaxoSmithKline)

John Carrino (Partners)

Werner Ceusters (Buffalo)

David Clunie (RadPharm, Princeton)

C. Forbes Dewey (MIT)

Ivo Dinov (UCLA)

Keith Dreyer (Harvard)

Christine Golbreich (Rennes)

Donald Harrington (NIBIB)

Frank Hartel (NCI)

Dave Helman (L&C)

Peter Hunter (Aukland)

David Kennedy (Harvard)

Richard I. Kitney (Imperial College, London)

Anand Kumar (IFOMIS)

Curtis Langlotz (University of Pennsylvania)

Suzanna Lewis (Berkeley)

William Lorensen (General Electric)

Yves Lussier (Columbia)

Peter F. Lyster (NIH/NIGMS)

Maryann Martone (BIRN)

Dirk Marwede (IFOMIS)

Robin A. McEntire (GlaxoSmithKline)

Chris Mungall (Berkeley)

Robert Murphy (CMU)

Mark Musen (Stanford)

Dianne Reeves (NCI)

Daniel Rubin (Stanford)

Mariana Casella Dos Santos (L&C, Belgium)

Nigam Shah (Stanford)

Kaushtubh Supekar (Stanford)

Barry Smith (Buffalo)

Some Relevant Links

The Open Microscopy Environment (OME) Data Model

OBO Biological Imaging Methods

RadLex: A Lexicon for Uniform Indexing and Retrieval of Radiology Information Resources

DICOM

David Clunie's Medical Image Format Site

Medical Image Databases

Mutant Mouse Images

Foundational Model of Anatomy

Structured Reporting

Registry of Image Analysis Tools

Murphy Lab Image Services

In Vivo Imaging

A Taxonomy of Diagram Taxonomies