The health care and life sciences community profile for dataset descriptions

Access to consistent, high-quality metadata is critical to finding, understanding, and reusing scientific data. However, while there are many relevant vocabularies for the annotation of a dataset, none sufficiently captures all the necessary metadata. This prevents uniform indexing and querying of d...

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Published inPeerJ preprints
Main Authors Dumontier, Michel, Gray, Alasdair J G, Marshall, M Scott, Alexiev, Vladimir, Ansell, Peter, Bader, Gary D, Baran, Joachim, Bolleman, Jerven T, Callahan, Alison, Cruz-Toledo, José, Gaudet, Pascale, Gombocz, Erich A, Gonzalez Beltran, Alejandra N, Groth, Paul, Haendel, Melissa, Ito, Maori, Jupp, Simon, Juty, Nick, Katayama, Toshiaki, Kobayashi, Norio, Krishnaswami, Kalpana, Laibe, Camille, Nicolas Le Novère, Lin, Simon, Malone, James, Miller, Michael, Mungall, Chris, Rietveld, Laurens, Wimalaratne, Sarala M, Yamaguchi, Atsuko
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published San Diego PeerJ, Inc 09.01.2017
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Summary:Access to consistent, high-quality metadata is critical to finding, understanding, and reusing scientific data. However, while there are many relevant vocabularies for the annotation of a dataset, none sufficiently captures all the necessary metadata. This prevents uniform indexing and querying of dataset repositories. Towards providing a practical guide for producing a high quality description of biomedical datasets, the W3C Semantic Web for Health Care and the Life Sciences Interest Group (HCLSIG) identified Resource Description Framework (RDF) vocabularies that could be used to specify common metadata elements and their value sets. The resulting guideline covers elements of description, identification, attribution, versioning, provenance, and content summarization. This guideline reuses existing vocabularies, and is intended to meet key functional requirements including indexing, discovery, exchange, query, and retrieval of datasets, thereby enabling the publication of FAIR data. The resulting metadata profile is generic and could be used by other domains with an interest in providing machine readable descriptions of versioned datasets.
ISSN:2167-9843
DOI:10.7287/peerj.preprints.1982v2