Abstract

BackgroundWith the ever increasing use of computational models in the biosciences, the need to share models and reproduce the results of published studies efficiently and easily is becoming more important. To this end, various standards have been proposed that can be used to describe models, simulations, data or other essential information in a consistent fashion. These constitute various separate components required to reproduce a given published scientific result.ResultsWe describe the Open Modeling EXchange format (OMEX). Together with the use of other standard formats from the Computational Modeling in Biology Network (COMBINE), OMEX is the basis of the COMBINE Archive, a single file that supports the exchange of all the information necessary for a modeling and simulation experiment in biology. An OMEX file is a ZIP container that includes a manifest file, listing the content of the archive, an optional metadata file adding information about the archive and its content, and the files describing the model. The content of a COMBINE Archive consists of files encoded in COMBINE standards whenever possible, but may include additional files defined by an Internet Media Type. Several tools that support the COMBINE Archive are available, either as independent libraries or embedded in modeling software.ConclusionsThe COMBINE Archive facilitates the reproduction of modeling and simulation experiments in biology by embedding all the relevant information in one file. Having all the information stored and exchanged at once also helps in building activity logs and audit trails. We anticipate that the COMBINE Archive will become a significant help for modellers, as the domain moves to larger, more complex experiments such as multi-scale models of organs, digital organisms, and bioengineering.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12859-014-0369-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • With the ever increasing use of computational models in the biosciences, the need to share models and reproduce the results of published studies efficiently and is becoming more important

  • The Simulation Experiment Description Markup Language (SED-ML) community initially developed the concept behind the Computational Modeling in Biology Network (COMBINE) Archive, when faced with the need to encapsulate the simulation experiment description and the models needed to perform that experiment [41]

  • Members of the community extended the aim of the SED-ML archive to encompass any file type that would be useful during a modeling and simulation procedure, and wrote an initial technical description

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Summary

Results

We describe the Open Modeling EXchange format (OMEX). Together with the use of other standard formats from the Computational Modeling in Biology Network (COMBINE), OMEX is the basis of the COMBINE Archive, a single file that supports the exchange of all the information necessary for a modeling and simulation experiment in biology. An OMEX file is a ZIP container that includes a manifest file, listing the content of the archive, an optional metadata file adding information about the archive and its content, and the files describing the model. The content of a COMBINE Archive consists of files encoded in COMBINE standards whenever possible, but may include additional files defined by an Internet Media Type. Several tools that support the COMBINE Archive are available, either as independent libraries or embedded in modeling software

Conclusions
Background
Results and discussion
Mesirov JP
46. FDA center for drug evaluation and research
55. Soiland-Reyes S
61. Smallbone K

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