bandcool.com bandcool.com
   Main Page -> About Us -> Privacy -> Terms of Use -> Add Your Link -> Add Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

People & Society

Travel & Accommodation

Fashion & Relationships

Investment & Finance

Self Enhancement

Children

Property & Estate

Health & Hygiene

Education & Reference

Jobs & Employment

Policies & Law

Issues & News

Family & Home

Food & Recipe

Culture & Art

Internet & Computers

Indoor Games

Recreation & Entertainment

Shopping & Auction

Business & Commerce

Adventure & Sports

Science & Research

Automobile & Automotive

Medicine & Treatment

 

Main Page –› Education & Reference –› Science Courses
 

DOE, NIH Discuss Informatics Goals

 
Author: Aaron Hall
Since the beginning of the Human Genome Project, informatics has been widely regarded as one of the project's most important elements. The vast quantity and wide variety of generated information dictate the use of computational tools for data collection, management, storage, organization, access, and analyses.

On April 2-3, the DOE and NIH human genome programs convened a workshop in Herndon, Virginia, to identify informatics needs and goals for the next 5 years. Attending were 46 invited informatics and genomics experts and 17 agency staff from DOE, NIH National Human Genome Research Institute, NIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences, and National Science Foundation (NSF).

Both DOE and NHGRI support the philosophy that the needs of data users are foremost and must drive the goals of genome informatics. At the meeting, the wide-ranging viewpoints of large sequencing centers, smaller specialized groups, biotechnology industry users, researchers exploring comparative and functional genomics, and medical geneticists were presented.

Not all uses for these data can be anticipated today, thus implying the need for building structural flexibility into current and planned databases that support the genome project. Additionally, because knowledge will grow over time, curating the data --correcting it and adding new functional and useful links (annotation)-- must be done on a continuous basis.

Meeting attendees identified priorities and made suggestions and policy recommendations on these and other issues.

Priorities and Issues
Major priorities identified by the group included the development of a reference genome map and sequence database and databases of individual variation and functional expression. Sequence data should be continuous and annotated, linked to maps, and structured to allow all conceivable data-supported queries. Data should be updated and curated by editors. The variation database should be organized according to population and individual genotype and haplotype; it should include or link to information on individual phenotypic variation. Functional expression databases should include such pathway and regulatory data as in the databases WIT, KEGG, and EcoCyc.

Standardization. Much current data are highly heterogeneous in format, organization, quality, and content. This is not surprising, given the wide diversity of genome-research investigators who are generating the data. An identified priority is to comprehensively capture raw, summary, or processed data in standard, well-structured formats using controlled vocabularies. Additionally, databases must be integrated and linked.

Intelligent consensus standards should be defined and implemented by academia, government, and industry working together. Today, industry standards are very distinct from the few that exist in the genome project. The Object Management Group, now composed largely of industry representatives, also should involve personnel from academia and government. Explicit object definitions and access methods are needed desperately. Component-oriented software standards would promote systems integration, interoperability, flexibility, and responsiveness to change (adaptability). A balance is needed, however, between maintaining standards and allowing change and flexibility.

Tools. Tools to speed up the data-finishing bottleneck in sequencing are critical; still other tools are needed for production, research, access, annotation, data capture, functional genomics, and data mining. A Web site that collects and annotates these tools would be very useful.

Availability of Underlying Data, Especially for Individual Genotypes. Given the expense of phenotyping, the ability to see ABI traces and check on the possible association with a particular single-nucleotide polymorphism would be valuable. ABI traces are not necessary for the reference sequence because questionable regions can be resequenced.

Annotation. Automated annotation analyses should use clearly defined standard operating procedures, consistent application, and sufficient documentation for a more detailed understanding of particular chromosome regions. Automated annotation is a way to generate intelligent hypotheses about sequence functions and must be regarded critically as overall annotation improves with time. For this reason, human participation in the annotation process is still vitally important for getting the most out of genomic information.

Quality Checks. Attendees suggested regular checks of database quality. Users are frustrated by incorrect data and the unwillingness or inability of database providers to correct these mistakes. Official editors who curate information could resolve errors and improve data quality. Successful quality assessment at sequence centers serves as a model.

Training and Environment Issues. NSF science and technology centers are models for needed genome informatics centers. Three to five such centers were proposed to facilitate interactions among various disciplines and the training of students.

Policy Recommendations

* Open competition should be used for most database and informatics needs.
* No single database can be expected to do everything for everybody; users, however, should feel that they are interacting with only one entity. Data submission should be uniform.
* Existing frameworks such as database schema and submission tools should be used where possible.
* Model-organism databases should continue to be supported.
* Raw data should be captured to the maximum extent possible before the information is irretrievable.
* Investments should be made in optimizing and exporting software tools from genome centers.

Author Bio:

You can search for this article using: social sciences, health colorado at denver & health sciences, 10 social sciences
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
5 Great Facts about Dolphins
 
About Spain - "What a Country"
 
College At Home - 13th Grade for Home-Schoolers
 
Why you should consider online tutoring for your child
 
At War with the State Education Dept. - The Fruitless Pursuit of a Teaching Career
 
Learn the French Language
 
Online University Degree
 
Articulating Boundaries of Behavioral Interaction with Artificial Intelligent Systems
 
On Dis-ease
 
Political Frugality - Review
 
 
 
 

Christian Boarding Schools

Christian boarding schools are religion-oriented schools that instill spiritual enrichment in childr ... - Steve Valentino
 

Locating Top Book Agents

Finding a competent book agent that will actually work diligently for you to help you reach your goa ... - Morgan Hamilton
 

The Special Secret of Intuition

New insights reveal how intuition controls the mind, through a contextual elimination algorithm... - Abraham Thomas
 
 

Fully Prepare Any Student For Class

Follow these 6 easy steps to feel more confident and prepared in the classroom for guaranteed better ... - Scott Palat
 

An Insight into the Problem of Stammering

Stammering can be a difficult think to live with in life. With help and tuition any one suffering fr ... - Adam Parsons
 

Surgical Biomaterials and Tissue Regeneration Technologies

Plants, invertebrate animals, amphibians and even reptiles have the ability to regenerate lost or da ... - Joseph R. Lopez
 

Managing the World; Future of Corporations and One World Governments

Is the World Ready for a One World Government? How about a one-world franchise system? Well it makes ... - Lance Winslow
 

Get Your College Degree Online

Learn how to now get a college degree online, and without the need to attend a college campus, as we ... - Kenny Love
 
 
   Main Page -> Privacy -> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.bandcool.com