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      OpenBiodiv: Linking Type Materials, Institutions, Locations and Taxonomic Names Extracted From Scholarly Literature

      , , , ,
      Biodiversity Information Science and Standards
      Pensoft Publishers

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          Abstract

          OpenBiodiv is a knowledge management system containing biodiversity knowledge extracted from scholarly literature: both recently published articles in Pensoft's journals and legacy (taxon treatments extracted by Plazi) (Senderov et al. 2017). OpenBiodiv advances our understanding of the use of scientific names, collection codes and institutions within published literature by using semantic technologies, such as the conversion of XML-encoded text to RDF triples, linked via the OpenBiodiv-O onthology (Senderov et al. 2018). In this poster, we show how OpenBiodiv, currently containing more than 729 million statements, can be used to address a specific use case: finding institutions storing type material specimens of the genus Prosopistoma from various literature sources (Fig. 1). This use case is important for various groups of users: institutions, taxonomists, and curators. Answering this complex question is made possible through the application of semantic technologies within OpenBiodiv. Data extraction from taxonomic articles and treatments is enabled the utilisation of common schemas and standards into the extraction process, whereas the conversion of XML-encoded scholarly literature into Resоurce Description Framework (RDF) is facilitated by OpenBiodiv-O. The code base for information extraction and data transformation is wrapped in the R packages rdf4r and ropenbio. The ontology allows to model the structure of research articles and treatments, as well as their corresponding metadata. Thus, OpenBiodiv-O is used to represent not only the sections of treatments but also the various entities within them, for instance geographic coordinates and institution codes within the “Type materials” section of a treatment. Institution codes marked up within articles using the Darwin Core standard (Wieczorek et al. 2012) are mapped to GRBio's institution records. Institutions which are not present in GRBio can often be extracted from the “Abbreviations” section of a given article, thus utilising the power of semantic publishing workflows to discover information hidden within scholarly literature (Penev et al. 2011, Agosti and Egloff 2009). Institutional codes (abbreviations) are then mapped to the narrative section, containing the type materials information. The extraction of coordinates in the taxonomic treatment section allows to establish the location of the collection event through reverse geocoding and enables the selection of treatments linked to a specific geographic region. Modelling of the “Nomenclature” section within OpenBiodiv-O helps to link taxonomic names, mapped to GBIF’s taxonomic backbone, to their type materials, thus facilitating the discovery of materials corresponding to species from a certain higher-rank taxon. 

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          Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach

          Background A large part of our knowledge on the world's species is recorded in the corpus of biodiversity literature with well over hundred million pages, and is represented in natural history collections estimated at 2 – 3 billion specimens. But this body of knowledge is almost entirely in paper-print form and is not directly accessible through the Internet. For the digitization of this literature, new territories have to be chartered in the fields of technical, legal and social issues that presently impede its advance. The taxonomic literature seems especially destined for such a transformation. Discussion Plazi was founded as an association with the primary goal of transforming both the printed and, more recently, "born-digital" taxonomic literature into semantically enabled, enhanced documents. This includes the creation of a test body of literature, an XML schema modeling its logic content (TaxonX), the development of a mark-up editor (GoldenGATE) allowing also the enhancement of documents with links to external resources via Life Science Identifiers (LSID), a repository for publications and issuance of bibliographic identifiers, a dedicated server to serve the marked up content (the Plazi Search and Retrieval Server, SRS) and semantic tools to mine information. Plazi's workflow is designed to respect copyright protection and achieves extraction by observing exceptions and limitations existent in international copyright law. Conclusion The information found in Plazi's databases – taxonomic treatments as well as the metadata of the publications – are in the public domain and can therefore be used for further scientific research without any restriction, whether or not contained in copyrighted publications.
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            OpenBiodiv-O: ontology of the OpenBiodiv knowledge management system

            Background The biodiversity domain, and in particular biological taxonomy, is moving in the direction of semantization of its research outputs. The present work introduces OpenBiodiv-O, the ontology that serves as the basis of the OpenBiodiv Knowledge Management System. Our intent is to provide an ontology that fills the gaps between ontologies for biodiversity resources, such as DarwinCore-based ontologies, and semantic publishing ontologies, such as the SPAR Ontologies. We bridge this gap by providing an ontology focusing on biological taxonomy. Results OpenBiodiv-O introduces classes, properties, and axioms in the domains of scholarly biodiversity publishing and biological taxonomy and aligns them with several important domain ontologies (FaBiO, DoCO, DwC, Darwin-SW, NOMEN, ENVO). By doing so, it bridges the ontological gap across scholarly biodiversity publishing and biological taxonomy and allows for the creation of a Linked Open Dataset (LOD) of biodiversity information (a biodiversity knowledge graph) and enables the creation of the OpenBiodiv Knowledge Management System. A key feature of the ontology is that it is an ontology of the scientific process of biological taxonomy and not of any particular state of knowledge. This feature allows it to express a multiplicity of scientific opinions. The resulting OpenBiodiv knowledge system may gain a high level of trust in the scientific community as it does not force a scientific opinion on its users (e.g. practicing taxonomists, library researchers, etc.), but rather provides the tools for experts to encode different views as science progresses. Conclusions OpenBiodiv-O provides a conceptual model of the structure of a biodiversity publication and the development of related taxonomic concepts. It also serves as the basis for the OpenBiodiv Knowledge Management System. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13326-017-0174-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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              XML schemas and mark-up practices of taxonomic literature

              Abstract We review the three most widely used XML schemas used to mark-up taxonomic texts, TaxonX, TaxPub and taXMLit. These are described from the viewpoint of their development history, current status, implementation, and use cases. The concept of “taxon treatment” from the viewpoint of taxonomy mark-up into XML is discussed. TaxonX and taXMLit are primarily designed for legacy literature, the former being more lightweight and with a focus on recovery of taxon treatments, the latter providing a much more detailed set of tags to facilitate data extraction and analysis. TaxPub is an extension of the National Library of Medicine Document Type Definition (NLM DTD) for taxonomy focussed on layout and recovery and, as such, is best suited for mark-up of new publications and their archiving in PubMedCentral. All three schemas have their advantages and shortcomings and can be used for different purposes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biodiversity Information Science and Standards
                BISS
                Pensoft Publishers
                2535-0897
                June 18 2019
                June 18 2019
                : 3
                Article
                10.3897/biss.3.35089
                6f49b4d9-2c55-40f2-aa69-7d51c28aeb3f
                © 2019

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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