Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Towards a Unified Ontology for Biomedical Modeling and Simulation

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Towards a Unified Ontology for Biomedical Modeling and Simulation"— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Towards a Unified Ontology for Biomedical Modeling and Simulation
Digital Human: Towards a Unified Ontology for Biomedical Modeling and Simulation The Potential of the Digital Anatomist Foundational Model for “Unifying” Biomedical Ontologies Cornelius Rosse M.D., D.Sc. Structural Informatics Group University of Washington

3 in Structural Informatics Research
Motivation in Structural Informatics Research Role of structure in biomedical concept representation Manifestations of health and disease are conceptualized as attributes of anatomical structures.

4 in Structural Informatics Research
Motivation in Structural Informatics Research Role of structure in biomedical concept representation Manifestations of health and disease are conceptualized as attributes of anatomical structures. Logical and comprehensive representation of anatomical knowledge provides a foundation for other types of biomedical information.

5 Towards a Unified Ontology for Biomedical Modeling and Simulation
Digital Human: Towards a Unified Ontology for Biomedical Modeling and Simulation Hypothesis Correlation (“unification”) of diverse biomedical ontologies is best accomplished by mapping structural attributes of anatomical entities.

6 Agenda of talk What is the Foundational Model?
What kind of information does it represent? How does it represent it? How can it support organ modeling and simulation?

7 What is the Foundational Model (FM)?
The Digital Anatomist Foundational Model is a symbolic model of the physical organization of the human body; declares the principles for including concepts and relationships that are implicitly assumed when knowledge of anatomy is applied in different contexts; explicitly defines concepts and relationships necessary and sufficient for consistently modeling the structure of the human body.

8 Fm = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) What is the Foundational Model (FM)?
High Level Scheme Fm = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) where: Ao = Anatomy ontology ASA = Anatomical Structural Abstraction ATA = Anatomical Transformation Abstraction Mk = Metaknowledge (principles, rules, axioms)

9 Anatomical Structural Abstraction
FM = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) ASA Anatomical Structural Abstraction Do Dimensional ontology Bn Boundary network Pn Part of SAn Spatial Association Ln Location network On Orientation network Cn Connectivity network CTMn Containment network AJn Adjacency QCn Qualitative Coordinate CTn Continuity network ATn Attachment SYn Synaptic Connectivity

10 Implementation of High Level Scheme
Principled Modeling = Foundational Principles + Explicit Definitions and Knowledge modeling environment: Protégé-2000

11 Principled Modeling Foundational Principles Definition principle
Assertions that provide the basis for reasoning and action Unified context principle Definition principle Constitutive principle Organizational unit principle

12 Principled Modeling Explicit Definitions Purpose of FM definitions:
Specify the essence of anatomical entities in terms of two sets of structural attributes: those of their genus differentia Provide the rationale for an inheritance hierarchy in a structural context

13 Principled Modeling Foundational Principles Definition principle
Assertions that provide the basis for reasoning and action Unified context principle Definition principle Constitutive principle Organizational unit principle

14 Agenda of talk What is the Foundational Model?
What kind of information does it represent? How does it represent it? How can it support organ modeling and simulation?

15 Anatomy ontology: Kinds of anatomical concepts Adapted from
Bloom & Fawcett: th ed Chapman & Hall

16 Representation of Anatomical Entities

17 Representation of Anatomical Entities

18 Representation of Anatomical Entities

19 Representation of Anatomical Entities

20 Representation of Anatomical Entities

21 Representation of Anatomical Entities

22 Representation of Anatomical Entities

23 Agenda of talk What is the Foundational Model?
What kind of information does it represent? How does it represent it? How can it support organ modeling and simulation?

24 Ao: taxonomic classification based on
Principled Modeling Fm = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) Ao: taxonomic classification based on explicit definition of concepts, inheritance of definitional structural attributes; consistent with foundational principles.

25 Anatomical Entity

26 Anatomical Entity Biological entity, which forms the whole or a part of, or is an attribute of, the structural organization of a biological organism.

27 Anatomical Entity Physical Anatomical Entity -is a- Conceptual

28 Non-material Physical
Anatomical Entity -is a- Physical Anatomical Entity Conceptual Anatomical Entity Material Physical Anatomical Entity Non-material Physical

29 Non-material Physical
Anatomical Entity -is a- Physical Anatomical Entity Conceptual Anatomical Entity Material Physical Anatomical Entity Non-material Physical Anatomical Entity Anatomical Space Anatomical Surface Anatomical Line Anatomical Point

30 Non-material Physical
Anatomical Entity -is a- Physical Anatomical Entity Conceptual Anatomical Entity Material Physical Anatomical Entity Non-material Physical Anatomical Entity Body Substance Anatomical Structure

31 Non-material Physical
Anatomical Entity -is a- Physical Anatomical Entity Conceptual Anatomical Entity Material Physical Anatomical Entity Non-material Physical Anatomical Entity Body Substance Anatomical Structure Cell Body Part Human Organ System Organ Organ Part Tissue Organ component Organ subdivision

32 Implementation of FM in Protégé 2000

33 Implementation of FM in Protégé 2000
Material physical anatomical entity which has inherent 3D shape; is generated by coordinated expression of the organism's own structural genes.

34 Implementation of FM in Protégé 2000
Anatomical structure that consists of cytoplasm surrounded by a plasma membrane, with or without the cell nucleus.

35 Experiments in Cell Classification

36 Experiments in Cell Classification
Somatic cell which has intercellular junctions with homologous cells.

37 Experiments in Cell Classification

38 Experiments in Cell Classification
Somatic cell which has adhesion sites with extracellular matrix components.

39 Experiments in Cell Classification

40 Frame of Cell

41 Anatomical Structural Abstraction
FM = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) ASA Anatomical Structural Abstraction

42 Anatomical Structural Abstraction
FM = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) ASA Anatomical Structural Abstraction Do Dimensional ontology Bn Boundary network Pn Part of SAn Spatial Association

43 Anatomical Structural Abstraction
FM = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) ASA Anatomical Structural Abstraction Do Dimensional ontology Bn Boundary network Pn Part of SAn Spatial Association Ln Location network On Orientation network Cn Connectivity network

44 Anatomical Structural Abstraction
FM = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) ASA Anatomical Structural Abstraction Do Dimensional ontology Bn Boundary network Pn Part of SAn Spatial Association Ln Location network On Orientation network Cn Connectivity network CTMn Containment network AJn Adjacency QCn Qualitative Coordinate

45 Anatomical Structural Abstraction
FM = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) ASA Anatomical Structural Abstraction Do Dimensional ontology Bn Boundary network Pn Part of SAn Spatial Association Ln Location network On Orientation network Cn Connectivity network CTMn Containment network AJn Adjacency QCn Qualitative Coordinate CTn Continuity network ATn Attachment CCn Cell Connectivity

46 ASA = ( Do, Pn, Bn, SAn ) Dimensional Ontology Anatomy Ontology Right
Polyhedron Volume (3-D) Dimensional Ontology Cardiac Chamber Organ Subdivision Organ Part Anatomical Structure Anatomy Ontology -is a- Right Ventricle ASA = ( Do, Pn, Bn, SAn )

47 ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn ) Dimensional Ontology Anatomy Ontology
Polyhedron Volume (3-D) Dimensional Ontology Cardiac Chamber Organ Subdivision Organ Part Anatomical Structure Anatomy Ontology -is a- Sternocostal Surface Diaphragmatic bounded by boundary of Anatomical Surface (2-D) Right Coronary Sulcus Anterior Interventricular Line (1-D) Inferior margin of heart Apex Boundary Network -is a- Posterior IV Sulcus Crux of heart Landmark Point (1-D) Right Ventricle ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn )

48 ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn ) Dimensional Ontology Anatomy Ontology
Polyhedron Volume (3-D) Dimensional Ontology Cardiac Chamber Organ Subdivision Organ Part Anatomical Structure Anatomy Ontology -is a- Sternocostal Surface Diaphragmatic bounded by boundary of Anatomical Surface (2-D) Right Coronary Sulcus Anterior Interventricular Line (1-D) Inferior margin of heart Apex Boundary Network -is a- Posterior IV Sulcus Crux of heart Landmark Point (1-D) Part-of Network Heart super- object Inflow part of RV Infundibulum Wall of RV Cavity of RV subobject -is a- has Cavity of infund. infl.part Right Ventricle ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn )

49 ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn ) Dimensional Ontology Anatomy Ontology
Polyhedron Volume (3-D) Dimensional Ontology Cardiac Chamber Organ Subdivision Organ Part Anatomical Structure Anatomy Ontology -is a- Sternocostal Surface Diaphragmatic bounded by boundary of Anatomical Surface (2-D) Right Coronary Sulcus Anterior Interventricular Line (1-D) Inferior margin of heart Apex Boundary Network -is a- Posterior IV Sulcus Crux of heart Landmark Point (1-D) Part-of Network Heart super- object Inflow part of RV Infundibulum Wall of RV Cavity of RV subobject -is a- has Cavity of infund. infl.part ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn ) Right Ventricle has adjacency anterior inferior to left Left ventricle Pericardial sac Diaphragm Spatial Association Network

50 ASA of Cell Generic cell Specialized cell Skeletal muscle fiber

51 Parts of the Cell

52 Parts of the Cell

53 Parts of the Cell

54 Parts of the Cell

55 Parts of the Cell

56 Frame of Cell

57 Cell-Specific Attributes

58 Cell-Specific Attributes

59 Agenda of talk What is the Foundational Model?
What kind of information does it represent? How does it represent it? How can it support organ modeling and simulation?

60 Organ Modeling Scenario
Generic cell Satellite cell Skeletal muscle fiber

61 Muscle-specific cell markers
Myogenic Lineage Muscle-specific cell markers Terminally differentiated cell: Myosin Muscle progenitor cells: Muscle-specific transcription factors: Myf5 MyoD Myogenin

62 Myogenic Lineage

63 Myogenic Lineage

64 Myogenic Lineage Gives rise to

65 Myogenic Lineage Gives rise to Gives rise to

66 Myogenic Lineage Embryonic stem cell Blood-borne stem cell Myogenic
(Satellite cell) Myoblast Myocyte Fuses Immature myotube Skeletal muscle fiber

67 Myogenic Lineage Myosin

68 Myogenic Lineage Myf5, MyoD Myf5 Myogenin Myosin

69 Myogenic Lineage Myf5, MyoD Myf5 Myogenin Myosin Myogenin Myosin

70 Organ Modeling Scenario
Generic cell Satellite cell Skeletal muscle fiber

71 Agenda of talk What is the Foundational Model?
What kind of information does it represent? How does it represent it? How can it support alignment (“unification”) of ontologies?

72 ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn ) Dimensional Ontology Anatomy Ontology
Polyhedron Volume (3-D) Dimensional Ontology Cardiac Chamber Organ Subdivision Organ Part Anatomical Structure Anatomy Ontology -is a- Sternocostal Surface Diaphragmatic bounded by boundary of Anatomical Surface (2-D) Right Coronary Sulcus Anterior Interventricular Line (1-D) Inferior margin of heart Apex Boundary Network -is a- Posterior IV Sulcus Crux of heart Landmark Point (1-D) Part-of Network Heart super- object Inflow part of RV Infundibulum Wall of RV Cavity of RV subobject -is a- has Cavity of infund. infl.part ASA = ( Do, Bn, Pn, SAn ) Right Ventricle has adjacency anterior inferior to left Left ventricle Pericardial sac Diaphragm Spatial Association Network

73 Myogenic Lineage Myf5, MyoD Myf5 Myogenin Myosin Myogenin Myosin

74 Anatomical Structural Abstraction
FM = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) ASA Anatomical Structural Abstraction Do Bn Pn SAn Dimensional ontology Boundary network Part_of network Spatial Association network Ln On Cn Location network Orientation network Connectivity network CTMn AJn QCn CTn ATn SYn Containment network Adjacency network Qualitative Coordinate network Continuity network Attachment network Synaptic Connectivity network

75 Agenda of talk What is the Foundational Model?
What kind of information does it represent? How does it represent it? How can it support experiment management systems (EMS)?

76 Digital Anatomist Information System
Anatomy Knowledge Sources DA Foundational Model Image Repository

77 Digital Anatomist Information System
Network Authoring Programs End-User Programs Servers DA Foundational Model Image Repository Anatomy Knowledge Sources

78 Digital Anatomist Information System
End User Interfaces Network Authoring Programs Digital Anatomist Atlases Brain Mapper EMS Servers DA Foundational Model Image Repository

79 Digital Anatomist Information System
DB(1) DB(2) DB(n) Network Authoring Programs EMS(n) EMS(1) EMS(2) Servers DA Foundational Model Image Repository

80 Conclusions Fm = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk)

81 FmBODY = {FmANATOMICAL_ENTITY}
Conclusions Fm = (Ao, ASA, ATA, Mk) FmBODY = {FmANATOMICAL_ENTITY}

82 Conclusions Role of Foundational Model of Anatomy
Prototype for symbolic models in other domains e.g., physiology, pathology, cancer therapy Core of biomedical knowledge bases to solve problems in education, research, health care Align (“unify”) diverse biomedical ontologies "Foundational" because anatomy is fundamental to all biomedical sciences; anatomical concepts encompassed by FM generalize to all biomedical domains.

83


Download ppt "Towards a Unified Ontology for Biomedical Modeling and Simulation"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google