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Toward Synthesizing Our Knowledge of Morphology: Using Ontologies and Machine Reasoning to Extract Presence/Absence Evolutionary Phenotypes across Studies.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Dececchi, TA; Balhoff, JP; Lapp, H; Mabee, PM
Published in: Systematic biology
November 2015

The reality of larger and larger molecular databases and the need to integrate data scalably have presented a major challenge for the use of phenotypic data. Morphology is currently primarily described in discrete publications, entrenched in noncomputer readable text, and requires enormous investments of time and resources to integrate across large numbers of taxa and studies. Here we present a new methodology, using ontology-based reasoning systems working with the Phenoscape Knowledgebase (KB; kb.phenoscape.org), to automatically integrate large amounts of evolutionary character state descriptions into a synthetic character matrix of neomorphic (presence/absence) data. Using the KB, which includes more than 55 studies of sarcopterygian taxa, we generated a synthetic supermatrix of 639 variable characters scored for 1051 taxa, resulting in over 145,000 populated cells. Of these characters, over 76% were made variable through the addition of inferred presence/absence states derived by machine reasoning over the formal semantics of the source ontologies. Inferred data reduced the missing data in the variable character-subset from 98.5% to 78.2%. Machine reasoning also enables the isolation of conflicts in the data, that is, cells where both presence and absence are indicated; reports regarding conflicting data provenance can be generated automatically. Further, reasoning enables quantification and new visualizations of the data, here for example, allowing identification of character space that has been undersampled across the fin-to-limb transition. The approach and methods demonstrated here to compute synthetic presence/absence supermatrices are applicable to any taxonomic and phenotypic slice across the tree of life, providing the data are semantically annotated. Because such data can also be linked to model organism genetics through computational scoring of phenotypic similarity, they open a rich set of future research questions into phenotype-to-genome relationships.

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Published In

Systematic biology

DOI

EISSN

1076-836X

ISSN

1063-5157

Publication Date

November 2015

Volume

64

Issue

6

Start / End Page

936 / 952

Related Subject Headings

  • Phenotype
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Data Interpretation, Statistical
  • Computational Biology
  • Classification
  • Biological Ontologies
  • Biological Evolution
  • Animals
  • Amphibians
  • 3105 Genetics
 

Citation

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Dececchi, T. A., Balhoff, J. P., Lapp, H., & Mabee, P. M. (2015). Toward Synthesizing Our Knowledge of Morphology: Using Ontologies and Machine Reasoning to Extract Presence/Absence Evolutionary Phenotypes across Studies. Systematic Biology, 64(6), 936–952. https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syv031
Dececchi, T Alexander, James P. Balhoff, Hilmar Lapp, and Paula M. Mabee. “Toward Synthesizing Our Knowledge of Morphology: Using Ontologies and Machine Reasoning to Extract Presence/Absence Evolutionary Phenotypes across Studies.Systematic Biology 64, no. 6 (November 2015): 936–52. https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syv031.
Dececchi, T. Alexander, et al. “Toward Synthesizing Our Knowledge of Morphology: Using Ontologies and Machine Reasoning to Extract Presence/Absence Evolutionary Phenotypes across Studies.Systematic Biology, vol. 64, no. 6, Nov. 2015, pp. 936–52. Epmc, doi:10.1093/sysbio/syv031.
Journal cover image

Published In

Systematic biology

DOI

EISSN

1076-836X

ISSN

1063-5157

Publication Date

November 2015

Volume

64

Issue

6

Start / End Page

936 / 952

Related Subject Headings

  • Phenotype
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Data Interpretation, Statistical
  • Computational Biology
  • Classification
  • Biological Ontologies
  • Biological Evolution
  • Animals
  • Amphibians
  • 3105 Genetics