Computer and Information SciencesBlogger

iPhylo

Rants, raves (and occasionally considered opinions) on phyloinformatics, taxonomy, and biodiversity informatics. For more ranty and less considered opinions, see my Twitter feed.ISSN 2051-8188. Written content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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BatsClassificationCluster MapsData CleaningGBIFComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Continuing the theme of the failings of the GBIF classification I've been playing further with cluster maps to visualise the problem (see this earlier post for an introduction).Browsing through bats in GBIF I keep finding the same species appearing more than once, albeit in different genera.

Data CleaningRDFSPARQLTaxonomyUniprotComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Readers of this blog will know that I'm sceptical about the current value of linked data and RDF in biodiversity informatics. But I came across an interesting paper on RDF and biocuration that suggests a good "use case" for RDF in constructing and curating taxonomic databases.The paper is "Catching inconsistencies with the semantic web: a biocuration case study" (PDF here) by Jerven Bolleman and Sebastien Gehant.

CrossrefDOIGithubJATSNLM DTDComputer and Information Sciences
Published

In a previous post (Learning from eLife: GitHub as an article repository) I discussed the advantages of an Open Access journal putting its article XML in a version-controlled repository like GitHub. In response to that post Pensoft (the publisher of ZooKeys ) did exactly that, and the XML is available at https://github.com/pensoft/ZooKeys-xml.OK, "now what?" I hear you ask.

EvolDirIFTTTTwitterWeb HooksWeb ServicesComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Since 2009 I've been running a service that takes posts to the EvolDir mailing list and sends them to a Twitter stream at @EvolDir. This service was running on a local machine which has died. Rather than wait until I rebuild that server (again), I looked around for other ways to recreate this service.

ELifeGithubZooKeysComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Playing with my eLife Lens-inspired article viewer and some recent articles from ZooKeys I regularly come across articles that are incorrectly marked up. As a quick reminder, my viewer takes the DOI for a ZooKeys article (just append it to http://bionames.org/labs/zookeys-viewer/?doi=, e.g. http://bionames.org/labs/zookeys-viewer/?doi=10.3897/zookeys.316.5132), fetches the corresponding XML and displays the article.Taking the article

BioNamesDark TaxaDNA BarcodingPLoSComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Quick note to highlight the following publication: This paper outlines the methods used by the BOLD project to cluster sequences into "BINS", and touches on the issue of dark taxa (taxa that are in GenBank but which lack formal scientific names). Might be time to revisit the dark taxa idea, especially now that I've got a better handle on the taxonomic literature (see BioNames) where the names of at least some dark taxa may lurk.

PLoS HubsSemantic MediawikiComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Here's a sketch of my vision of how to make something like the original PLoS Hubs vision (see The demise of the @PLoS Biodiversity Hub: what lessons can we learn? for background). In the blog post explaining the vision behind PLoS Hubs (Aggregating, tagging and connecting biodiversity studies), David Mindell wrote:So, first up, some basic principles. The goal (only slightly tongue in cheek) is for the user to never want to leave the site.

AppsIPadNatureComputer and Information Sciences
Published

I'm a big fan of the work Nature publishing group is doing in experimenting with new methods of publishing, such as their iOS apps (which inspired me to "clone" their iPhone app) and the Encode app with the concept of "threads". But there's an aspect of the iPad app that puzzles me: Nature's app doesn't know that a linked article elsewhere in Nature is also available using the app.

PlatformPLoSPLoS HubsComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Jonathan Eisen recently wrote that the PLOS Hub for Biodiversity is soon to be retired, and sure enough it's vanished from the web (the original URL hubs.plos.org/web/biodiversity/ now bounces you straight to http://www.plosone.org/, you can still see what it looked like in the Wayback Machine).Like Jonathan, I was involved in the hub, which was described in the following paper:In retrospect PLoS's decision to pull the hub is not surprising.