Investigating semantic similarity measures across the Gene Ontology: the relationship between sequence and annotation
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Open Access
- 1 July 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Bioinformatics
- Vol. 19 (10) , 1275-1283
- https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btg153
Abstract
Motivation: Many bioinformatics data resources not only hold data in the form of sequences, but also as annotation. In the majority of cases, annotation is written as scientific natural language: this is suitable for humans, but not particularly useful for machine processing. Ontologies offer a mechanism by which knowledge can be represented in a form capable of such processing. In this paper we investigate the use of ontological annotation to measure the similarities in knowledge content or‘ semantic similarity’ between entries in a data resource. These allow a bioinformatician to perform a similarity measure over annotation in an analogous manner to those performed over sequences. A measure of semantic similarity for the knowledge component of bioinformatics resources should afford a biologist a new tool in their repetoire of analyses. Results: We present the results from experiments that investigate the validity of using semantic similarity by comparison with sequence similarity. We show a simple extension that enables a semantic search of the knowledge held within sequence databases. Availability: Software available from http://www.russet.org.uk Contact: p.lord@russet.org.uk * To whom correspondence should be addressed.Keywords
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