BioModels—15 years of sharing computational models in life science

Rahuman S. Malik‐Sheriff(European Bioinformatics Institute), Mihai Glont(European Bioinformatics Institute), Tung V. N. Nguyen(European Bioinformatics Institute), Krishna Kumar Tiwari(Babraham Institute), Matthew Roberts(European Bioinformatics Institute), Ashley Xavier(European Bioinformatics Institute), Manh Tu Vu(European Bioinformatics Institute), Jinghao Men(European Bioinformatics Institute), Matthieu Maire(European Bioinformatics Institute), Sarubini Kananathan(European Bioinformatics Institute), Emma L. Fairbanks(European Bioinformatics Institute), Johannes P Meyer(European Bioinformatics Institute), Chinmay Arankalle(European Bioinformatics Institute), Thawfeek Varusai(European Bioinformatics Institute), Vincent Knight-Schrijver(Babraham Institute), Lu Li(Babraham Institute), Corina Dueñas-Roca(European Bioinformatics Institute), Gaurhari Dass(European Bioinformatics Institute), Sarah Keating(European Bioinformatics Institute), Young Mi Park(European Bioinformatics Institute), Nicola Buso(European Bioinformatics Institute), Nicolás Rodríguez(Babraham Institute), Michael Hucka(California Institute of Technology), Henning Hermjakob(European Bioinformatics Institute)
Nucleic Acids Research
November 6, 2019
Cited by 413Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Computational modelling has become increasingly common in life science research. To provide a platform to support universal sharing, easy accessibility and model reproducibility, BioModels (https://www.ebi.ac.uk/biomodels/), a repository for mathematical models, was established in 2005. The current BioModels platform allows submission of models encoded in diverse modelling formats, including SBML, CellML, PharmML, COMBINE archive, MATLAB, Mathematica, R, Python or C++. The models submitted to BioModels are curated to verify the computational representation of the biological process and the reproducibility of the simulation results in the reference publication. The curation also involves encoding models in standard formats and annotation with controlled vocabularies following MIRIAM (minimal information required in the annotation of biochemical models) guidelines. BioModels now accepts large-scale submission of auto-generated computational models. With gradual growth in content over 15 years, BioModels currently hosts about 2000 models from the published literature. With about 800 curated models, BioModels has become the world's largest repository of curated models and emerged as the third most used data resource after PubMed and Google Scholar among the scientists who use modelling in their research. Thus, BioModels benefits modellers by providing access to reliable and semantically enriched curated models in standard formats that are easy to share, reproduce and reuse.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis