Difference between revisions of "BioPortal Help"

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===Accessing Controlled Ontologies===
 
===Accessing Controlled Ontologies===
Some submitters do not want everyone to be able to browse the terms in their ontology. These ontologies are marked with visibility “Private” or “Licensed”. To browse the terms in these ontologies you must be both  
+
Some submitters want to limit who can browse the terms in their ontology. These ontologies are marked with visibility “Private” or “Licensed”. To browse the terms in these ontologies you must be both  
 
* logged in to BioPortal
 
* logged in to BioPortal
 
* granted access to the ontology
 
* granted access to the ontology
  
For '''private ontologies''', the ontology submitter directly controls access. Please contact the submitter to gain access to a private ontology.  
+
For '''private ontologies''', the ontology submitter directly controls access. Please contact the submitter to gain access to a private ontology. Contact information for the ontology is available on the ontology summary page.
  
 
For '''licensed ontologies''', the submitter indirectly controls access. When you attempt to access a licensed ontology, the system will prompt you to enter the license information required by the submitter. When you have entered the required information, the system will allow you to access the ontology.
 
For '''licensed ontologies''', the submitter indirectly controls access. When you attempt to access a licensed ontology, the system will prompt you to enter the license information required by the submitter. When you have entered the required information, the system will allow you to access the ontology.
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===Filtering by Ontologies===
 
===Filtering by Ontologies===
If you want to only search in a subset of ontologies you can specify the desired ontologies in the Ontologies box. (Note that it is no faster to search a subset than to search all ontologies.) Simply type in the ontology name or acronym to chose the desired ontology. You can also select from a list of all ontologies using the “select from list” link.  
+
If you want to search only in a subset of ontologies you can specify the desired ontologies in the Ontologies box. (Note that it is no faster to search a subset than to search all ontologies.) Simply type the ontology name or acronym to chose the desired ontology. You can also select from a list of all ontologies using the “select from list” link.  
  
 
===Accessing Search Programmatically===
 
===Accessing Search Programmatically===
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==Mappings Tab==
 
==Mappings Tab==
  
Mappings are associations between two or more terms in different ontologies. This association typically represents a degree of similarity between the terms but this meaning is not required. The author of the mapping defines the semantics of a particular mapping. It is also usual for a mapping to be bi-directional, but again, this is not required. The mapping author defines directionality.
+
Mappings are associations between two or more terms in different ontologies. This association typically, but not always, represents a degree of similarity between the terms. The author of the mapping defines the semantics of a particular mapping. It is also usual for a mapping to be bi-directional, but again, this is not required. The mapping author defines directionality.
  
 
===Exploring Mappings===
 
===Exploring Mappings===
To examine mappings for an ontology, select it from the drop-down list. You will then see a table showing all ontologies for which at least one mapping exists between the two ontologies. Select an ontology from this table to browse the mappings between the two ontologies.
+
To examine mappings for an ontology, select the ontology from the drop-down list. You will then see a table showing all ontologies for which at least one mapping exists between that ontology and the ontology you selected. Select an ontology from this table to browse the mappings between the two ontologies.
  
 
===Accessing Mappings Programmatically===
 
===Accessing Mappings Programmatically===
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===Expanded Matching===
 
===Expanded Matching===
In addition to the straightforward direct matches, the user may expand the set of matches by including matches from mapped terms and from hierarchical expansion. For most ontologies (OWL and UMLS RRF) the system performs the hierarchical expansion on the superclass (“is-a”) relationship. For OBO ontologies the hierarchical expansion also includes the part-of relationship.  You use the “number of levels” field to control the number of levels up the hierarchy for which the system will return terms for a given match.
+
In addition to the direct matches, the user may expand the set of matches by including matches from mapped terms and from hierarchical expansion. For most ontologies (OWL and UMLS RRF) the system performs the hierarchical expansion on the superclass (“is-a”) relationship. For OBO ontologies the hierarchical expansion also includes the part-of relationship.  You use the “number of levels” field to control the number of levels up the hierarchy for which the system will return terms for a given match.
  
 
===Creating Annotations Programmatically===
 
===Creating Annotations Programmatically===

Revision as of 13:04, 21 September 2011

Home Page

BioPortal provides access to commonly used biomedical ontologies and to tools for working with them. BioPortal allows you to

All information available through the BioPortal application is also available through our REST API. Please see the API documentation for more information.

Browse Tab

Here you can browse our library of Biomedical ontologies. The system displays some summary information about each ontology. You can also submit your own ontology.

Finding an Ontology

To find a particular ontology quickly, begin typing the ontology name or abbreviation in the “Filter by Text” field. You can also narrow the list of ontologies shown by selecting a specific “category” (a domain) or a “group” to which the ontology belongs.

Submitting an Ontology

To submit an ontology press the “Submit New Ontology” button. You must be logged in to BioPortal to submit an ontology.

Receiving Updates

You can subscribe to receive RSS updates when any ontology in the system changes by clicking the subscribe link. You can subscribe to updates for a particular ontology from the summary page for that ontology. To go to the summary page click on the ontology name.

Accessing Controlled Ontologies

Some submitters want to limit who can browse the terms in their ontology. These ontologies are marked with visibility “Private” or “Licensed”. To browse the terms in these ontologies you must be both

  • logged in to BioPortal
  • granted access to the ontology

For private ontologies, the ontology submitter directly controls access. Please contact the submitter to gain access to a private ontology. Contact information for the ontology is available on the ontology summary page.

For licensed ontologies, the submitter indirectly controls access. When you attempt to access a licensed ontology, the system will prompt you to enter the license information required by the submitter. When you have entered the required information, the system will allow you to access the ontology.

In addition, there are summary only ontologies. The terms for these ontologies are not available in BioPortal at all. Please contact the ontology submitter for more information about these ontologies.

Accessing Ontologies Programmatically

To access this information programmatically, see our ontology REST API documentation.

Search Tab

The search capability allows you to input some text and find terms across multiple terminologies that contain this text. The names, synonyms, properties for a term are searched for matches to the input text.

Finding Terms

Enter the full or partial name of a term in the search box. To search across all ontologies simply hit the Search button. The system looks for matches in the term name, synonyms, term ids, and in property values. You can filter the returned values by ontology or by the type of match by selecting one of the filter links in the output table.

Filtering by Ontologies

If you want to search only in a subset of ontologies you can specify the desired ontologies in the Ontologies box. (Note that it is no faster to search a subset than to search all ontologies.) Simply type the ontology name or acronym to chose the desired ontology. You can also select from a list of all ontologies using the “select from list” link.

Accessing Search Programmatically

To access this capability, see our search REST API documentation.

Mappings Tab

Mappings are associations between two or more terms in different ontologies. This association typically, but not always, represents a degree of similarity between the terms. The author of the mapping defines the semantics of a particular mapping. It is also usual for a mapping to be bi-directional, but again, this is not required. The mapping author defines directionality.

Exploring Mappings

To examine mappings for an ontology, select the ontology from the drop-down list. You will then see a table showing all ontologies for which at least one mapping exists between that ontology and the ontology you selected. Select an ontology from this table to browse the mappings between the two ontologies.

Accessing Mappings Programmatically

To access mappings programmatically, see the mappings REST API documentation.

Recommender Tab

Accessing Ontology Recommendations Programmatically

To retrieve ontology recommendations programmatically, please see our ontology reoommender REST API documentation.

Annotator Tab

Basic Matching

The annotator accepts a selection of text and annotates it with terms from ontologies. The system matches words in the text to terms in ontologies by doing an exact string comparison (a “direct” match) between the text and ontology term names, synonyms, and ids.

Expanded Matching

In addition to the direct matches, the user may expand the set of matches by including matches from mapped terms and from hierarchical expansion. For most ontologies (OWL and UMLS RRF) the system performs the hierarchical expansion on the superclass (“is-a”) relationship. For OBO ontologies the hierarchical expansion also includes the part-of relationship. You use the “number of levels” field to control the number of levels up the hierarchy for which the system will return terms for a given match.

Creating Annotations Programmatically

To create annotations programmatically see our annotator REST API documentation.

Resource Index Tab

Projects Tab