SKOSSupport

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PLOS Thesaurus concept tree in BioPortal

Support for SKOS vocabularies in BioPortal

BioPortal is a web-based portal for accessing and sharing ontologies. The application accepts ontology submissions in OWL and OBO format, and SKOS vocabularies that contain particular constructs.

This wiki page documents the minimum set of SKOS constructs that must be present in a SKOS vocabulary for BioPortal to accept and handle the submission properly.

Please note that the SKOS constructs described here are handled only for vocabularies that are identified as SKOS when they are submitted to BioPortal. Vocabularies submitted as OWL or OBO formats are not examined for SKOS constructs.


Required SKOS constructs

skos:Concept

Concepts are the fundamental elements of SKOS vocabularies and are asserted using the skos:Concept class, e.g.:

 <http://www.example.com/animals> rdf:type skos:Concept

In SKOS vocabularies, BioPortal only treats the SKOS concept assertions as concepts to be displayed. If the vocabulary contains other assertions about other types of concepts, BioPortal will not treat these as concepts in any of its displays or features. See the W3C's SKOS System Primer and SKOS Reference for concept documentation and examples:

https://www.w3.org/TR/2009/NOTE-skos-primer-20090818/#secconcept

https://www.w3.org/TR/skos-reference/#concepts

skos:ConceptScheme & skos:hasTopConcept

For every ontology entry in BioPortal, the application provides a tabbed interface with various views of the ontology data, e.g., a "Classes" tab with a tree structure to graphically depict the hierarchical collection of ontology classes.

In the case of SKOS vocabularies, BioPortal determines which concepts to display as roots in the concept tree by querying vocabulary content for occurrences of skos:hasTopConcept property assertions. Top concepts are the most general concepts contained in SKOS concept schemes (an aggregation of one or more SKOS concepts).

The following example, taken from the SKOS System Primer, shows how to define a concept scheme and link it to the most general concepts it contains:

@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .
@prefix rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> .
@prefix ex: <http://www.example.com/> .

ex:animalThesaurus rdf:type skos:ConceptScheme;
  skos:hasTopConcept ex:mammals;
  skos:hasTopConcept ex:fish.

SKOS vocabularies submitted to BioPortal must contain a minimum of one concept scheme and top concept assertion. See the the SKOS System Primer and SKOS Reference for more documentation of concept schemes and top concepts:

https://www.w3.org/TR/2009/NOTE-skos-primer-20090818/#secscheme

https://www.w3.org/TR/skos-reference/#schemes

skos:broader hierachy

For the hierarchy to be handle and display properly by BioPortal, hierarchical relations between skos:Concept need to defined by the skos:broader. If another property is used (narrower, transitive), it is not an issue, but BioPortal will display hierarchies on based on skos:broader properties.

ex:zebra rdf:type skos:Concept;
  skos:inScheme ex:animalThesaurus;
  skos:prefLabel "Plains zebra";
  skos:altLabel "Equus quagga";
  skos:broader ex:mammals.

Note on metrics

PLOS Thesaurus metrics tree in BioPortal

Because BioPortal's metrics are being computed by the OWL-API, a SKOS format ontology will be then treated like any RDF file with classes and instances. According to the SKOS specification, because skos:Concept are instances, they will be counted as "individuals" (not class). Therefore, when looking a the metrics, one shall consider that the number of individuals reports the number of concepts in the ontology and not the number of classes like this is the case with OWL format ontologies.