Abstract

BackgroundTaxonomic descriptions are traditionally composed in natural language and published in a format that cannot be directly used by computers. The Exploring Taxon Concepts (ETC) project has been developing a set of web-based software tools that convert morphological descriptions published in telegraphic style to character data that can be reused and repurposed. This paper introduces the first semi-automated pipeline, to our knowledge, that converts morphological descriptions into taxon-character matrices to support systematics and evolutionary biology research. We then demonstrate and evaluate the use of the ETC Input Creation - Text Capture - Matrix Generation pipeline to generate body part measurement matrices from a set of 188 spider morphological descriptions and report the findings.ResultsFrom the given set of spider taxonomic publications, two versions of input (original and normalized) were generated and used by the ETC Text Capture and ETC Matrix Generation tools. The tools produced two corresponding spider body part measurement matrices, and the matrix from the normalized input was found to be much more similar to a gold standard matrix hand-curated by the scientist co-authors. Special conventions utilized in the original descriptions (e.g., the omission of measurement units) were attributed to the lower performance of using the original input. The results show that simple normalization of the description text greatly increased the quality of the machine-generated matrix and reduced edit effort. The machine-generated matrix also helped identify issues in the gold standard matrix.ConclusionsETC Text Capture and ETC Matrix Generation are low-barrier and effective tools for extracting measurement values from spider taxonomic descriptions and are more effective when the descriptions are self-contained. Special conventions that make the description text less self-contained challenge automated extraction of data from biodiversity descriptions and hinder the automated reuse of the published knowledge. The tools will be updated to support new requirements revealed in this case study.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12859-016-1352-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Taxonomic descriptions are traditionally composed in natural language and published in a format that cannot be directly used by computers

  • We introduce the Explorer of Taxon Concepts (ETC) toolkit, which has been developed in the Exploring Taxon Concepts project to offer a suite of web-based software tools for morphological character extraction, taxon-character matrix building, interactive taxonomic key generation, and taxonomic concept analyses

  • Still under continued enhancement, ETC Text Capture and Matrix Generation tools are used by a small number of biologists to generate matrices or compare taxonomic concepts for systematics and evolutionary research [1]. We introduce these two tools through a case study, in which body part measurements from spider taxonomic descriptions are extracted and consolidated as a taxon-character matrix

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Summary

Introduction

Taxonomic descriptions are traditionally composed in natural language and published in a format that cannot be directly used by computers. Due to different taxonomic perspectives of authors through time, scientific names and their associated descriptions in these works are not static but represent taxonomic concepts [1]. Taxonomic works often contain detailed morphological, distributional, and other evidence that can assist with analyzing the evolution in taxonomic concepts over time This morphological evidence can be managed in taxon-character matrices, a research tool widely used in biological research, ranging from taxonomy to phylogenetic studies. These matrices are created manually by biologists within their taxonomic area of expertise. More recently MorphoBank has made a web-based matrix editor available for researchers to collaboratively develop large matrices [4]

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