An empirical analysis of ontology reuse in BioPortal.

Journal: Journal of biomedical informatics
Published Date:

Abstract

Biomedical ontologies often reuse content (i.e., classes and properties) from other ontologies. Content reuse enables a consistent representation of a domain and reusing content can save an ontology author significant time and effort. Prior studies have investigated the existence of reused terms among the ontologies in the NCBO BioPortal, but as of yet there has not been a study investigating how the ontologies in BioPortal utilize reused content in the modeling of their own content. In this study we investigate how 355 ontologies hosted in the NCBO BioPortal reuse content from other ontologies for the purposes of creating new ontology content. We identified 197 ontologies that reuse content. Among these ontologies, 108 utilize reused classes in the modeling of their own classes and 116 utilize reused properties in class restrictions. Current utilization of reuse and quality issues related to reuse are discussed.

Authors

  • Christopher Ochs
    New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ.
  • Yehoshua Perl
    Dept of Computer Science, NJIT, Newark, NJ, USA.
  • James Geller
    Dept of Computer Science, NJIT, Newark, NJ, USA.
  • Sivaram Arabandi
    ONTOPRO, Houston, TX 77025, USA.
  • Tania Tudorache
    Stanford Center for Biomedical Informatics Research, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
  • Mark A Musen
    Stanford Center for Biomedical Informatics Research, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5479, United States. Electronic address: musen@stanford.edu.