Title
Beyond Interoperability - Tracking and Managing the Results of Computational Applications
Abstract
Molecular biology applications, like those of other scientific domains, need to store and view large amounts of specialized quantitative information. With the advent of high speed sequencing technology and considerable funding to ``map" the genomes of key biological organisms, public databases such as GenBank, PDB, EMBL, JIPID, and SwissProt make millions of genetic sequences available to molecular biologists, and industry and university laboratories maintain large databases. The need for common interfaces and query languages to exploit these heterogeneous databases is well documented, and several such systems now exist or are under development. Our own work on database and program interoperability in this domain has shown, however, that providing an interface is but a first step towards making these databases fully useful.The system we are developing integrates and tracks inputs and results from numerous computational biology programs. It helps researchers organize result items from sequence comparisons into ``clusters" that can be marked, named, annotated, and manipulated. An alpha version is implemented in Smalltalk.This paper describes the scientific problem our system aims to solve, as well as current barriers to development and research opportunities suggested by those barriers. We present its conceptual data model, the current prototype, and future implementation plans.
Year
DOI
Venue
1997
10.1109/SSDM.1997.621191
SSDBM
Keywords
Field
DocType
beyond interoperability,computational applications,current prototype,large databases,molecular biology application,heterogeneous databases,public databases,large amount,scientific domain,numerous computational biology program,current barrier,molecular biologist,distributed databases,databases,bioinformatics,genetics,computational biology,query languages,molecular biophysics,computer applications,genomics,query language,genome mapping,molecular biology,biological systems,open systems,sequences,conceptual data model
Data mining,Query language,Conceptual schema,Interoperability,Computer science,Smalltalk,Exploit,Distributed database,Open system (systems theory),GenBank,Database
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
0-8186-7952-2
17
42.36
References 
Authors
20
7
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Judith Bayard Cushing1193106.22
Justin Laird21742.70
Emir Pasalic319255.42
Elizabeth Kutter41742.36
Tim Hunkapiller52555.85
Frank Zucker61742.36
David P. Yee72043.96