• biotoolsSchema: a formalized schema for bioinformatics software description 

      Ison, Jon; Ienasescu, Hans; Rydza, Emil; Chmura, Piotr; Rapacki, Kristoffer; Gaignard, Alban; Schwämmle, Veit; van Helden, Jacques; Kalaš, Matúš; Ménager, Hervé (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      Background Life scientists routinely face massive and heterogeneous data analysis tasks and must find and access the most suitable databases or software in a jungle of web-accessible resources. The diversity of information ...
    • EDAM: the bioscientific data analysis ontology (update 2021) [version 1; not peer reviewed] 

      Black, Melissa; Lamothe, Lucie; Eldakroury, Hager; Kierkegaard, Mads; Priya, Ankita; Machinda, Anne; Singh Khanduja, Uttam; Patoliya, Drashti; Rathi, Rashika; Che Nico, Tawah Peggy; Umutesi, Gloria; Blankenburg, Claudia; Op, Anita; Chieke, Precious; Babatunde, Omodolapo; Laurie, Steve; Neumann, Steffen; Schwämmle, Veit; Kuzmin, Ivan; Hunter, Chris; Karr, Jonathan; Ison, Jon; Gaignard, Alban; Brancotte, Bryan; Ménager, Hervé; Kalaš, Matúš (Others, 2021)
      EDAM [1] is a domain ontology of data analysis and data management in bio- and other sciences, and science-based applications. It comprises concepts related to analysis, modelling, optimisation, and data life-cycle. ...
    • Perspectives on automated composition of workflows in the life sciences [version 1; peer review: 2 approved] 

      Lamprecht, Anna-Lena; Palmblad, Magnus; Ison, Jon; Schwämmle, Veit; Al Manir, Mohammad Sadnan; Altintas, Ilkay; Baker, Christopher J. O.; Ben Hadj Amor, Ammar; Capella-Gutierrez, Salvador; Charonyktakis, Paulos; Crusoe, Michael R.; Gil, Yolanda; Goble, Carole; Griffin, Timothy J.; Groth, Paul; Ienasescu, Hans; Jagtap, Pratik; Kalaš, Matúš; Kasalica, Vedran; Khanteymoori, Alireza; Kuhn, Tobias; Mei, Hailiang; Ménager, Hervé; Möller, Steffen; Richardson, Robin A.; Robert, Vincent; Soiland-Reyes, Stian; Stevens, Robert; Szaniszlo, Szoke; Verberne, Suzan; Verhoeven, Aswin; Wolstencroft, Katherine (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      Scientific data analyses often combine several computational tools in automated pipelines, or workflows. Thousands of such workflows have been used in the life sciences, though their composition has remained a cumbersome ...