Minimum information requested in the annotation of biochemical models (MIRIAM)

Nicolas Le Novère(European Bioinformatics Institute), Andrew Finney(Science Oxford), Michael Hucka(California Institute of Technology), Upinder S. Bhalla(National Centre for Biological Sciences), Fabien Campagne(Cornell University), Julio Collado‐Vides(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Edmund J. Crampin(University of Auckland), Matt Halstead(University of Auckland), Edda Klipp(Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics), Pedro Mendes(Virginia Tech), Poul MF Nielsen(University of Auckland), Herbert M. Sauro(Keck Graduate Institute), Bruce E. Shapiro(Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Jacky L. Snoep(Stellenbosch University), H. D. Spence(GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom)), Barry L. Wanner(Purdue University West Lafayette)
Nature Biotechnology
December 1, 2005
Cited by 631Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Most of the published quantitative models in biology are lost for the community because they are either not made available or they are insufficiently characterized to allow them to be reused. The lack of a standard description format, lack of stringent reviewing and authors' carelessness are the main causes for incomplete model descriptions. With today's increased interest in detailed biochemical models, it is necessary to define a minimum quality standard for the encoding of those models. We propose a set of rules for curating quantitative models of biological systems. These rules define procedures for encoding and annotating models represented in machine-readable form. We believe their application will enable users to (i) have confidence that curated models are an accurate reflection of their associated reference descriptions, (ii) search collections of curated models with precision, (iii) quickly identify the biological phenomena that a given curated model or model constituent represents and (iv) facilitate model reuse and composition into large subcellular models.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis