Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

December 19, 2011

Journal of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology (JBCB)

Filed under: Bioinformatics,Computational Biology — Patrick Durusau @ 8:08 pm

Journal of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology (JBCB)

From the Aims and Scope page:

The Journal of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology aims to publish high quality, original research articles, expository tutorial papers and review papers as well as short, critical comments on technical issues associated with the analysis of cellular information.

The research papers will be technical presentations of new assertions, discoveries and tools, intended for a narrower specialist community. The tutorials, reviews and critical commentary will be targeted at a broader readership of biologists who are interested in using computers but are not knowledgeable about scientific computing, and equally, computer scientists who have an interest in biology but are not familiar with current thrusts nor the language of biology. Such carefully chosen tutorials and articles should greatly accelerate the rate of entry of these new creative scientists into the field.

To give you an idea of the type of content you will find, consider:

A RE-EVALUATION OF BIOMEDICAL NAMED ENTITY–TERM RELATIONS by TOMOKO OHTA, SAMPO PYYSALO, JIN-DONG KIM, JUN’ICHI TSUJII. Volume: 8, Issue: 5(2010) pp. 917-928 DOI: 10.1142/S0219720010005014.

Abstract:

Text mining can support the interpretation of the enormous quantity of textual data produced in biomedical field. Recent developments in biomedical text mining include advances in the reliability of the recognition of named entities (NEs) such as specific genes and proteins, as well as movement toward richer representations of the associations of NEs. We argue that this shift in representation should be accompanied by the adoption of a more detailed model of the relations holding between NEs and other relevant domain terms. As a step toward this goal, we study NE–term relations with the aim of defining a detailed, broadly applicable set of relation types based on accepted domain standard concepts for use in corpus annotation and domain information extraction approaches.

as representative content.

Enjoy!

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