CTSA Ontology Workshop

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Venue: Hilton Garden Inn Orlando Airport, 7300 Augusta National Drive, Orlando, Florida 32822
Date: February 11-12, 2013.


Please note that this meeting is now at full capacity. No further places are available

This is the second meeting of the new IKFC Clinical and Translational Science Ontology Affinity Group which has been established to leverage the use of common ontologies to support different aspects of information-driven clinical and translational research. The focus of this meeting is to explore new and existing uses of common ontologies to support sharing and discovery of data and resources, researcher networking, and particularly to support the evaluation of research.

Schedule Monday, February 11, 2013

9:00-9:30 Participant introductions: What are your interests? What do you hope to gain out of participating in the ontology interest group?

9:30 Barry Smith: Limning the CTSA Ontology Landscape

10:00 Existing initiatives to support consortium-wide data standardization and integration

Carlo Torniai: CTSAconnect/eagle-i/VIVO/ISF Integrated Semantic Framework ontology efforts to support linking expertise across CTSAs
Maria Grando: Permission Ontology for informed consent and HIPAA compliance
Dagobert Soergel: Ontology-based resource and information tracking to support evaluation of translational research
Layne Johnson: Discussion of CTSA Research Networking Affinity Group purpose, survey of networking platform, data results

11:15 Coffee

11:30 Practical applications of ontology to support translational research Brief updates from:

Warren Kibbe: Using Disease Ontology for mining medical records
Yongqun He: OGMS the Ontology of General Medical Science, IDO the Infectious Disease Ontology, and VO the Vaccine Ontology
Rob Wynden: The HOM Health Ontology Mapper / Federated i2b2
Matthias Brochhausen: Enabling semantic integration of biobank administrative data using OMIABIS

12:15 Lunch

1:00 Jon Corson-Rikert: VIVO as an example of both sustainability and cross-CTSA integration efforts

As an example of sustainability and cross-CTSA ontology based efforts, Jon will discuss how VIVO is a part of an open source incubator project with DuraSpace to create an updated and expanded search across additional sites and drawing on VIVO-compatible RDF data from additional software platforms. The VIVO search effort will also provide opportunities for integrating and searching data expressed in the more comprehensive Integrated Semantic Framework under development through the CTSAconnect project, demonstrating how ontology-based data alignment can enable new functionalities across the CTSAs and for other local, regional, or discipline-based consortia.

1:15 Breakouts to discuss sustainability of cross-CTSA ontology based efforts

Each group discusses:

1. What sustainability efforts exist to promote cross-CTSA integration?
2. How have ontologies helped or been involved in such efforts?
3. What roles can or should a CTSA play in these contexts?

2:45 Coffee

3:00 Report back and review in large group

4:00 Identify action items for the ontology interest group to address use of ontologies in cross-CTSA activities and their sustainability

5:00 Close

Schedule Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Research Networking
Evaluation (including evaluation metrics)
Community engagement
Comparative effectiveness research
Regulatory knowledge
Researcher training
Research profiling

(for more details see here

9:00-Kristi Holmes: Impact assessment and evaluation

Kristi will discuss efforts at identifying outputs and indicators for research impact see [1] for examples. The idea is to stimulate discussion in the breakout groups surrounding how ontologies can be used to support research impact and evaluation.

9:15 Breakouts to discuss impact assessment and evaluation ontology based efforts

Each group discusses:

1. What efforts exist to measure scientific impact?
2. What efforts exist to aid in the evaluation of CTSA activities and outcomes?
3. How have ontologies helped or could help in such efforts?
4. What roles can or should a CTSA and the ontology interest group play in these contexts?

10:00 Report back and review in large group'

10:45 Coffee

11:00 Discuss

12:00 Lunch

13:00 Identifying goals and key partnerships for the CTSOAG

14:30 Coffee

14:45 Outreach plan, documentation, summary, action items

Possible deliverables:
A list of ontology-related efforts across the CTSA Consortium compiled from the knowledge of participants
A draft list of requirements for an ontology-based system to support CTSA research and evaluation
A draft list of the major families of data which will be collected through the activities of a CTSA institution

16:00 Close

Participants

Sivaram Arabandi (Smart Content Team, Elsevier)
Mathias Brochhausen (Arkansas CTSA)
Jennifer L. Bufford (Arkansas CTSA)
Michael Conlon (University of Florida CTSA / VIVO)
Jon Corson-Rikert (Cornell / VIVO)
James Demery (University of Florida CTSA)
Davera Gabriel (University of California, Davis CTSC)
Solomon T. Garner (RCMI Translational Research Network, Jackson State University)
Maria Grando (UCSD)
Yongqun He (Ann Arbor, Michigan CTSA)
William Hogan (Arkansas CTSA)
Kristi L. Holmes (Washington University ICTS)
Pathak Jyotishman (Mayo Clinic)
Warren Kibbe (Northwestern CTSA)
Layne Johnson (University of Minnesota)
Fabian Neuhaus (National Institute of Standards and Technology)
Clara M. Pelfrey (Evaluation Director, Case Western Reserve CTSC)
Richard Rauscher (Penn State University)
Katherine G. Reilly (Medical University of South Carolina)
Nicholas Rejack (University of Florida)
Barry Smith (Buffalo)
Dagobert Soergel (Buffalo)
Carlo Torniai (Oregon / CTSAconnect)
Patricia Whetzel (NCBO / Stanford)
Rob Wynden (HOM / UCSF)

Organizers: William Hogan, Barry Smith and Melissa Haendel

Sponsor: Translational Research Institute of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

Further information: Please write to Barry Smith

Background

  • The IKFC Clinical and Translational Science Ontology Affinity Group has been established to leverage the use of common ontologies to support different aspects of information-driven clinical and translational research,? The focus of this meeting is to explore new and existing uses of the common ontologies to support which are being developed in any case to support researcher networking and sharing of data, particularly in the evaluation of scientific research, and even more particularly in the evaluation of CTSA activities, resource sharing, .researcher networking, and biomedical informatics.
  • The proposal is that, when data are harvested from institutional sources, these data can be aggregated using common ontologies such as are maintained by the eagle-i and VIVO initiatives. As these data accumulate they can be compared at regular intervals for purposes of tracking and evaluation of research activities and generation of reports on research activities that can be filtered by type, location, or a temporally defined range.
  • Interestingly, the use of common ontologies will mean that the data that is harvested could also be exploited also for other purposes. First, they will make all research-relevant activities easily searchable in something like the way that publications databases such as PubMed and Google Scholar already make publications easily searchable. Second, they will make results of different sorts of research activities combinable, since the same ontologies will be used to annotate, for example, clinical studies, as are used to describe mentorship opportunities or patient outreach initiatives. Third, because common ontologies are being used, all of the information collected will discoverable not only be those working within the collecting institution, but also by individuals, institutions and software agents, on the outside.

Some subgoals of this meeting

  • Subgoals of the meeting include some or all of:
0. To devise a plan for creating an evolving inventory of projects across the CTSA Consortium that develop and use ontologies. The inventory needs to include information about the ontologies, their uses, the groups involved.
1. To identify existing efforts in tracking and evaluation of research activities that can be facilitated by the use of ontologies, especially within the framework of the CTSA consortium, and to share the lessons learned from such experiments. One central example under this heading is the Integrated Semantic Framework (ISF), which is being developed in the context of the CTSAconnect project (http://www.ctsaconnect.org), which has as one central component an ontology for Agents, Resources, and Grants (ARG) and which draws on the eagle-i and VIVO ontologies and on the tagging taxonomy from the CTSA ShareCenter.
2. To explore strategies to create an evaluation and tracking system for an organization like a CTSA based on, or working with, a university-wide system for faculty reporting and to identify potential collaborators working on or interested in the implementation of different aspects of such a strategy. The sorts of data which might be imported into an ontology-based tracking and evaluation system would include:
university-wide reporting data
national data for example pertaining to grants, patents
social networking data for example pertaining to existing collaborations, including mentoring
clinical study data for example available through IRBnet
Electronic Health Record data pertaining to clinicians and clinician expertise
3. This meeting will serve as the second meeting of the new CTSOAG, and will provide opportunities for participants to provide updates on recent activities promoting the use of ontologies for the sharing of data across the CTSA consortium.


The proposal is that, when data are harvested from institutional sources, these data can be aggregated using common ontologies such as are maintained by the eagle-i and VIVO initiatives. As these data accumulate they can be compared at regular intervals for purposes of tracking and evaluation of research activities and generation of reports on research activities that can be filtered by type, location, or a temporally defined range.

Interestingly, the use of common ontologies will mean that the data that is harvested could also be exploited also for other purposes. First, they will make all research-relevant activities easily searchable in something like the way that publications databases such as PubMed and Google Scholar already make publications easily searchable. Second, they will make results of different sorts of research activities combinable, since the same ontologies will be used to annotate, for example, clinical studies, as are used to describe mentorship opportunities or patient outreach initiatives. Third, because common ontologies are being used, all of the information collected will discoverable not only be those working within the collecting institution, but also by individuals, institutions and software agents, on the outside.


Subgoals

The specific subgoals of the meeting are as follows (comments and suggestions welcome):

0. To devise a plan for creating an evolving inventory of projects across the CTSA Consortium that develop and use ontologies. The inventory needs to include information about the ontologies, their uses, the groups involved

Deliverables: Outline of a plan and ways to realize the plan, including a list of participants

1. To identify existing efforts in tracking and evaluation of research activities that can be facilitated by the use of ontologies, especially within the framework of the CTSA consortium, and to share the lessons learned from such experiments. One central example under this heading is the Integrated Semantic Framework (ISF), which is being developed in the context of the CTSAconnect project (http://www.ctsaconnect.org), which has as one central component an ontology for Agents, Resources, and Grants (ARG) and which draws on the eagle-i and VIVO ontologies and on the tagging taxonomy from the CTSA ShareCenter.

2. To explore strategies to create an evaluation and tracking system for an organization like a CTSA based on, or working with, a university-wide system for faculty reporting and to identify potential collaborators working on or interested in the implementation of different aspects of such a strategy. The sorts of data which might be imported into an ontology-based tracking and evaluation system would include:

university-wide reporting data
national data for example pertaining to grants, patents
social networking data for example pertaining to existing collaborations, including mentoring
clinical study data for example available through IRBnet
Electronic Health Record data pertaining to clinicians and clinician expertise
Deliverables: A list of such efforts compiled from the knowledge of participants. A draft list of requirements for such a system. This includes objectives 2 and 4 (which may be the same), a draft list of such data resulting from a brainstorming at the meeting.