Find open-source science resources
Cross-domain directory aggregating tools, AI models, datasets, and research resources from bio.tools, Bioconductor, HuggingFace, curated GitHub awesome-lists, and more.
Filters
Domain
Language(1)
License
Source
Type(1)
12 of 5,662 resources
The Context and Measurement Ontology (COMO) contains ontological terms to describe the context for various types of experimental data and measurements. It is useful in its current state for several different environmental microbiology projects. This ontology is used in multiple CORAL (Contextual Ontology-based Repository Analysis Library) deployments.
The Common Core Ontologies (CCO) comprise twelve ontologies that are designed to represent and integrate taxonomies of generic classes and relations across all domains of interest. CCO is a mid-level extension of Basic Formal Ontology (BFO), an upper-level ontology framework widely used to structure and integrate ontologies in the biomedical domain (Arp, et al., 2015). BFO aims to represent the most generic categories of entity and the most generic types of relations that hold between them, by defining a small number of classes and relations. CCO then extends from BFO in the sense that every class in CCO is asserted to be a subclass of some class in BFO, and that CCO adopts the generic relations defined in BFO (e.g., has_part) (Smith and Grenon, 2004). Accordingly, CCO classes and relations are heavily constrained by the BFO framework, from which it inherits much of its basic semantic relationships.
The Chromosome Ontology is an automatically derived ontology of chromosomes and chromosome parts.
The Bibframe vocabulary consists of RDF classes and properties used for the description of items cataloged principally by libraries, but may also be used to describe items cataloged by museums and archives. Classes include the three core classes - Work, Instance, and Item - in addition to many more classes to support description. Properties describe characteristics of the resource being described as well as relationships among resources. For example: one Work might be a "translation of" another Work; an Instance may be an "instance of" a particular Bibframe Work. Other properties describe attributes of Works and Instances. For example: the Bibframe property "subject" expresses an important attribute of a Work (what the Work is about), and the property "extent" (e.g. number of pages) expresses an attribute of an Instance.
A data model for managing information about chemical entities, ranging from atoms through molecules to complex mixtures.
An extension of Schema.org to annotate metadata on software projects
An EMMO-based domain ontology for atomistic and electronic modelling.
Algorithm Metadata Vocabulary is a vocabulary for capturing and storing the metadata about the algorithms (a procedure or a set of rules that is followed step-by-step to solve a problem, especially by a computer). There are uncountable algorithms present in every area (e.g., Computer Science, Mathematics), which makes it hard for specialists, academicians, application engineers, and so forth to discover, distinguish, select, and reuse them. [from repository]
This ontology integrates cell type markers for cells in the Cell Ontology from various sources along with details of marker context (anatomical context, assay), confidence (where available) and provenance. [from repository]