Abstract
BackgroundIn prior work, we presented the Ontology of Physics for Biology (OPB) as a computational ontology for use in the annotation and representations of biophysical knowledge encoded in repositories of physics-based biosimulation models. We introduced OPB:Physical entity and OPB:Physical property classes that extend available spatiotemporal representations of physical entities and processes to explicitly represent the thermodynamics and dynamics of physiological processes. Our utilitarian, long-term aim is to develop computational tools for creating and querying formalized physiological knowledge for use by multiscale “physiome” projects such as the EU’s Virtual Physiological Human (VPH) and NIH’s Virtual Physiological Rat (VPR).ResultsHere we describe the OPB:Physical dependency taxonomy of classes that represent of the laws of classical physics that are the “rules” by which physical properties of physical entities change during occurrences of physical processes. For example, the fluid analog of Ohm’s law (as for electric currents) is used to describe how a blood flow rate depends on a blood pressure gradient. Hooke’s law (as in elastic deformations of springs) is used to describe how an increase in vascular volume increases blood pressure. We classify such dependencies according to the flow, transformation, and storage of thermodynamic energy that occurs during processes governed by the dependencies.ConclusionsWe have developed the OPB and annotation methods to represent the meaning—the biophysical semantics—of the mathematical statements of physiological analysis and the biophysical content of models and datasets. Here we describe and discuss our approach to an ontological representation of physical laws (as dependencies) and properties as encoded for the mathematical analysis of biophysical processes.
Highlights
In prior work, we presented the Ontology of Physics for Biology (OPB) as a computational ontology for use in the annotation and representations of biophysical knowledge encoded in repositories of physics-based biosimulation models
The parsing of biological function into physical entities and processes is fundamental to how we observe, represent, and analyze biology using a range of expressions from the purely descriptive (e.g., “increased blood pressure increases blood flow”) to formal quantitative mathematical expressions
We described how the OPB extends and adapts classes from the Basic Formal Ontology (BFO) [1] and the General Formal Ontology (GFO) [2] to represent OPB:Physical entity and OPB:Physical property classes [3,4] that extend BFO and GFO spatiotemporal representations of physical entities and processes to explicitly represent the thermodynamics and dynamics of physiological processes
Summary
We presented the Ontology of Physics for Biology (OPB) as a computational ontology for use in the annotation and representations of biophysical knowledge encoded in repositories of physics-based biosimulation models. We introduced OPB:Physical entity and OPB:Physical property classes that extend available spatiotemporal representations of physical entities and processes to explicitly represent the thermodynamics and dynamics of physiological processes. The parsing of biological function into physical entities and processes is fundamental to how we observe, represent, and analyze biology using a range of expressions from the purely descriptive (e.g., “increased blood pressure increases blood flow”) to formal quantitative mathematical expressions (e.g., a pressure gradient is related to blood flow via the fluid version of Ohm’s law). We described how the OPB extends and adapts classes from the Basic Formal Ontology (BFO) [1] and the General Formal Ontology (GFO) [2] to represent OPB:Physical entity and OPB:Physical property classes [3,4] that extend BFO and GFO spatiotemporal representations of physical entities and processes to explicitly represent the thermodynamics and dynamics of physiological processes. Hooke’s law (as in elastic deformations of springs) is used to describe how an increase in vascular volume increases blood pressure
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