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Events: Details

CBIIT Speaker Series: The Monarch Initiative: Semantic Phenotyping for Disease Diagnosis and Discovery

Category: Seminar
Description: Topic: The Monarch Initiative: Semantic Phenotyping for Disease Diagnosis and Discovery Speaker: Melissa Haendel, Ph.D., Director of the Ontology Development Group, Oregon Health and Science University, Library and Department of Medical Informatics and Epidemiology Synopsis: Elucidating disease and dysfunction requires understanding how genotypic variation relates to phenotypic outcomes. However, data integration and retrieval are key challenges as phenotype data is largely unstructured and is encoded in a variety of formats. In addition, we only know the functional consequences of mutation for less than 40% of the human coding genome. Use of semantically structured phenotype data from model organisms so as to be comparable to human can supplement the human data to aid disease discovery. The ontologies act not only as data standards within and across species, but provide the connection of anatomical form to phenotypic outcomes — thereby enabling deep anatomical analysis to persevere, grow, and shed new light on how biological systems function across scale. The use of cross-species anatomy and phenotype ontologies can be combined with exome analysis to support disease diagnosis. The integrated data across models provisions for the development of methods to ensure quality structured phenotyping for maximal analytic utility, as well as garnering an understanding for how different organisms provide different phenotypic insights into gene function. Semantically capturing interactions with environmental perturbants (such as exposures or drug treatments) and the change in phenotypic outcomes over time is challenging, but is increasingly relevant for rare disease, cancer, and other more common disorders, as we seek to stratify patients and better support precision medicine.
When: Wednesday 21 January, 2015, 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm EST
Where: NCI Shady Grove Campus Room 2W908, or via WebEx
Website: https://wiki.nci.nih.gov/x/K4DCDw
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