National Primate Research Center and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Box 357330, Seattle, WA, 98195-7330, USA.
Neuroinformatics. 2012 Jan;10(1):97-114. doi: 10.1007/s12021-011-9128-8.
BrainInfo ( http://braininfo.org ) is a growing portal to neuroscientific information on the Web. It is indexed by NeuroNames, an ontology designed to compensate for ambiguities in neuroanatomical nomenclature. The 20-year old ontology continues to evolve toward the ideal of recognizing all names of neuroanatomical entities and accommodating all structural concepts about which neuroscientists communicate, including multiple concepts of entities for which neuroanatomists have yet to determine the best or 'true' conceptualization. To make the definitions of structural concepts unambiguous and terminologically consistent we created a 'default vocabulary' of unique structure names selected from existing terminology. We selected standard names by criteria designed to maximize practicality for use in verbal communication as well as computerized knowledge management. The ontology of NeuroNames accommodates synonyms and homonyms of the standard terms in many languages. It defines complex structures as models composed of primary structures, which are defined in unambiguous operational terms. NeuroNames currently relates more than 16,000 names in eight languages to some 2,500 neuroanatomical concepts. The ontology is maintained in a relational database with three core tables: Names, Concepts and Models. BrainInfo uses NeuroNames to index information by structure, to interpret users' queries and to clarify terminology on remote web pages. NeuroNames is a resource vocabulary of the NLM's Unified Medical Language System (UMLS, 2011) and the basis for the brain regions component of NIFSTD (NeuroLex, 2011). The current version has been downloaded to hundreds of laboratories for indexing data and linking to BrainInfo, which attracts some 400 visitors/day, downloading 2,000 pages/day.
BrainInfo(http://braininfo.org)是一个不断发展的神经科学网络信息门户。它通过神经名称索引,这是一个旨在弥补神经解剖命名法歧义的本体论。这个拥有 20 年历史的本体论继续朝着理想的方向发展,旨在识别所有神经解剖实体的名称,并容纳神经科学家交流的所有结构概念,包括尚未确定最佳或“真实”概念化的实体的多个概念。为了使结构概念的定义明确和术语一致,我们创建了一个“默认词汇”,其中包含从现有术语中选择的独特结构名称。我们根据旨在最大限度地提高在口头交流和计算机化知识管理中使用的实用性的标准来选择标准名称。NeuroNames 的本体论可容纳多种语言的标准术语的同义词和同音异义词。它将复杂结构定义为由主要结构组成的模型,这些结构用明确的操作术语定义。NeuroNames 目前将八种语言中的 16000 多个名称与大约 2500 个神经解剖学概念联系起来。本体论保存在一个关系数据库中,其中包含三个核心表:名称、概念和模型。BrainInfo 使用 NeuroNames 按结构索引信息,解释用户查询并澄清远程网页上的术语。NeuroNames 是 NLM 的统一医学语言系统(UMLS,2011 年)的资源词汇,也是 NIFSTD(NeuroLex,2011 年)的大脑区域组成部分的基础。当前版本已被下载到数百个实验室,用于索引数据并链接到 BrainInfo,该门户每天吸引约 400 名访客,每天下载 2000 页。