Abstract

BackgroundEffective response to public health emergencies, such as we are now experiencing with COVID-19, requires data sharing across multiple disciplines and data systems. Ontologies offer a powerful data sharing tool, and this holds especially for those ontologies built on the design principles of the Open Biomedical Ontologies Foundry. These principles are exemplified by the Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO), a suite of interoperable ontology modules aiming to provide coverage of all aspects of the infectious disease domain. At its center is IDO Core, a disease- and pathogen-neutral ontology covering just those types of entities and relations that are relevant to infectious diseases generally. IDO Core is extended by disease and pathogen-specific ontology modules.ResultsTo assist the integration and analysis of COVID-19 data, and viral infectious disease data more generally, we have recently developed three new IDO extensions: IDO Virus (VIDO); the Coronavirus Infectious Disease Ontology (CIDO); and an extension of CIDO focusing on COVID-19 (IDO-COVID-19). Reflecting the fact that viruses lack cellular parts, we have introduced into IDO Core the term acellular structure to cover viruses and other acellular entities studied by virologists. We now distinguish between infectious agents – organisms with an infectious disposition – and infectious structures – acellular structures with an infectious disposition. This in turn has led to various updates and refinements of IDO Core’s content. We believe that our work on VIDO, CIDO, and IDO-COVID-19 can serve as a model for yielding greater conformance with ontology building best practices.ConclusionsIDO provides a simple recipe for building new pathogen-specific ontologies in a way that allows data about novel diseases to be easily compared, along multiple dimensions, with data represented by existing disease ontologies. The IDO strategy, moreover, supports ontology coordination, providing a powerful method of data integration and sharing that allows physicians, researchers, and public health organizations to respond rapidly and efficiently to current and future public health crises.

Highlights

  • Effective response to public health emergencies, such as we are experiencing with COVID-19, requires data sharing across multiple disciplines and data systems

  • Pathogens and infectious entities The term infection relies on pathogen, which is defined in Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO) Infectious Disease Ontology Core (Core) as a material entity bearing a pathogenic disposition

  • The term infectious disorder relies on infectious pathogen, which IDO Core defines as a pathogen bearing an infectious disposition

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Summary

Introduction

Effective response to public health emergencies, such as we are experiencing with COVID-19, requires data sharing across multiple disciplines and data systems. Ontologies offer a powerful data sharing tool, and this holds especially for those ontologies built on the design principles of the Open Biomedical Ontologies Foundry. These principles are exemplified by the Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO), a suite of interoperable ontology modules aiming to provide coverage of all aspects of the infectious disease domain. For instance, a research team trying to model a given population’s herd immunity to measles. This depends on the Babcock et al Journal of Biomedical Semantics (2021) 12:13 more powerful methods for data sharing and integration must be applied. One of the most successful and widely adopted approaches to coordinated ontology development is that of the Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) Foundry [5], a collective of developer groups dedicated to creating, testing, and maintaining a suite of ontologies based on an evolving set of ontology design principles: Ontologies should use a well-specified syntax and share a common space of identifiers

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