Abstract

BackgroundThe Basic Formal Ontology (BFO) is a top-level formal foundational ontology for the biomedical domain. It has been developed with the purpose to serve as an ontologically consistent template for top-level categories of application oriented and domain reference ontologies within the Open Biological and Biomedical Ontologies Foundry (OBO). BFO is important for enabling OBO ontologies to facilitate in reliably communicating and managing data and metadata within and across biomedical databases. Following its intended single inheritance policy, BFO's three top-level categories of material entity (i.e. ‘object’, ‘fiat object part’, ‘object aggregate’) must be exhaustive and mutually disjoint. We have shown elsewhere that for accommodating all types of constitutively organized material entities, BFO must be extended by additional categories of material entity.Methodology/Principal FindingsUnfortunately, most biomedical material entities are cumulative-constitutively organized. We show that even the extended BFO does not exhaustively cover cumulative-constitutively organized material entities. We provide examples from biology and everyday life that demonstrate the necessity for ‘portion of matter’ as another material building block. This implies the necessity for further extending BFO by ‘portion of matter’ as well as three additional categories that possess portions of matter as aggregate components. These extensions are necessary if the basic assumption that all parts that share the same granularity level exhaustively sum to the whole should also apply to cumulative-constitutively organized material entities. By suggesting a notion of granular representation we provide a way to maintain the single inheritance principle when dealing with cumulative-constitutively organized material entities.Conclusions/SignificanceWe suggest to extend BFO to incorporate additional categories of material entity and to rearrange its top-level material entity taxonomy. With these additions and the notion of granular representation, BFO would exhaustively cover all top-level types of material entities that application oriented ontologies may use as templates, while still maintaining the single inheritance principle.

Highlights

  • The importance of databases in biomedical sciences constantly increases and with it the importance of organizing and standardizing their contents

  • We can complete the transformation of instance granularity trees to type granularity trees for cumulativeconstitutively organized material entities (Fig. 11) by specifying the categories for extra-cellular molecules at levels coarser than the molecular level and the categories for cells occurring outside from organs at levels coarser than the cellular level of type granularity

  • The here proposed notion of granular representation allows to maintain the clear distinction of fixed levels of a compositional granularity [19] for a type granularity tree of cumulative-constitutively organized material entities and still accommodate for the specificities of biological material entities that result from their cumulative constitutive granularity

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of databases in biomedical sciences constantly increases and with it the importance of organizing and standardizing their contents. Domain reference ontologies [5,6], like the Foundational Model of Anatomy (FMA), represent generalpurpose resources that are developed to support a range of different types of research for a specific domain They have the potential to provide a template of top-level categories for application ontologies of their domain, resulting in an increased comparability and compatibility of respective application ontologies. By referring to adequate examples from biology we demonstrate the necessity of further extending BFO with additional top-level categories, which we introduce and discuss We argue that this extension is necessary if the basic assumption that all parts sharing the same granularity level exhaustively sum to the whole should apply to cumulative-constitutively organized material entities. Link/ID http://www.ifomis.org/bfo/1.1/ snap#MaterialEntity http://www.ifomis.org/bfo/1.1/ snap#Object http://www.ifomis.org/bfo/1.1/ snap#FiatObjectPart http://www.ifomis.org/bfo/1.1/ snap#ObjectAggregate how all top-level categories of material entity of the extended BFO can be best subsumed under a top-level taxonomy that accommodates all types of constitutively and cumulative-constitutively organized material entities

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