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To display the list of ontologies in BioPortal, get the details of the classes and their properties etc., the plugin invokes the [http://www.bioontology.org/wiki/index.php/NCBO_REST_services BioPortal Restful Services]. | To display the list of ontologies in BioPortal, get the details of the classes and their properties etc., the plugin invokes the [http://www.bioontology.org/wiki/index.php/NCBO_REST_services BioPortal Restful Services]. | ||
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= How to use it = | = How to use it = |
Revision as of 15:42, April 14, 2011
BioPortal Import Plugin
The BioPortal Import Plugin allows the user to import classes from external ontologies stored in BioPortal. The user can import entire trees of classes with a desired depth and choose which properties to import for each class.
Contents
Versions & Compatibility
This section lists available versions of BioPortal Import Plugin.
No version information available.
If you click on the button below to add a new version of BioPortal Import Plugin, you will be asked to define a page title for the new version. Please adhere to the naming convention of BioPortal Import Plugin X.X.X when you define the new page!
Changelog
No version information available.
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Overview
The BioPortal Reference plugin is added as an action to the OWLClasses tab of the Protege-OWL user interface. The plugin allows a user to import classes from external BioPortal ontologies into a local ontology in Protege-OWL. The basic steps in using the plugin are to: a) browse through all the BioPortal ontologies (except remote ones) and select which one to import classes from; b) select one or more classes to import from the BioPortal ontology, and c) import them as subclasses of the selected class in the local ontology.
The plugin uses the RESTful services provided by BioPortal to allow the user to browse through the latest versions of all BioPortal ontologies. However, remote ontologies (identified by the value of their isRemote property) cannot be explored in the plugin, since BioPortal does not provide the information for these ontologies through its REST services. The user can view the classes of the selected ontology in an expandable tree format, and also view the properties of each class.
The plugin is configurable and works with Protege-OWL. The configurations provide users with the ability to: a) import entire subtrees of classes from BioPortal ontologies; b) save the imported classes as a separate ontology and/or as a file to the local disk, and c) choose which (if any) property values to import for each class and assign an equivalent user property for each imported property, if desired.
What does it look like
Like this:
Under the hood
The plugin creates instances of the OWLNamedClass
class to store all the imported classes from BioPortal. If the user chooses to import any property of the imported classes, it is assigned to one of the OWLAnnotationProperties
of the current OWLModel
, as configured by the user.
An example of an imported class from the
SNOMED Clinical Terms
ontology in BioPortal is shown below:
To display the list of ontologies in BioPortal, get the details of the classes and their properties etc., the plugin invokes the BioPortal Restful Services.
How to use it
The BioPortal Import plugin can be invoked by selecting a class of a domain ontology in the OwlClasses
tab in Protege-OWL and then clicking on the icon as shown below:
Create a reference property
To use it with OWL projects, first decide on a property that will store as values the instances of external references. You can either choose from existing properties (foaf:topicOf, or others), or you can create your own annotation property, for example, externalReference. You may also use object properties, or just plain RDF properties. If you don't already have this property defined in your ontology, please create it.
Configure the form
Second step is to configure the form of the class where you want to use the plugin. For example, if you would like to add external references to all classes (e.g., Pizza class, Heart class, etc.), then you will have to configure the form of the owl:Class
. To configure the form, click on a class in your ontology and click on the little F
icon at the top-right hand side of the ClassesTab. You will get a dialog whether to make owl:Class visible, click OK.
Then go to the Forms Tab (you may already be there after closing the dialog), make sure that owl:Class is selected, and double click on an empty spot. You will get a dialog with all properties and their attached widget. For the reference property from step 1 (e.g., externalReference) associate the BioPortalReferenceWidget.
Note: The new widget will be created under the top widget (it's a bug), so just drag the top widget to right a little bit, and drag from underneath the BioPortalReference widget to a place of your choice in the UI.
Configure the widget
Normally, you would not change the default configuration of the widget, but in case you need to customize it for your own project please read this section. Otherwise, you may just skip it.
You may configure the widget in the Forms Tab by double clicking on the BioPortalReference widget. In the 'Columns Tab, you may configure what columns and the width of each column that should show up:
For example, you may remove the url slot and this will be removed from the display of the BioPortalReferenceWidget, or you may add other column, or switch the order.
In the Search Tab, you may configure the search parameters for BioPortal:
The result
Below is a screenshot that shows the OWLClasses tab, for which we have configured using the steps above, the BioPortalReference widget:
Download
The plugin is distributed with the Protege 3.4.2 release and newer. However, we might need to make changes to the plugin to keep in sync with the BioPortal releases. For this reason, we also provide separate downloads for the plugin.
We have a patch version of the plugin for Protege 3.4.3, that can be downloaded from here. Unzip it into your Protege 3.4.x plugin folder. (Make sure you override the old versions of the plugin.)
The source code of the plugin is available in our SVN: http://smi-protege.stanford.edu/svn/bioportal-reference-plugin/trunk/ and it is licensed under Mozilla Public License.
Developer's Guide
This plugin is very easy to extend.
Configure the classpath and Eclipse setup
First, you should get the sources of the plugin from the SVN repository, as explained in the above section. The plugin depends on:
- standard-extensions (get the one in the zip from here)
- protege-owl
- xstream libs (get the binary version from here, Libs needed in the classpath: xpp3_min_xyz.jar and xstream-xyz.jar)
If you would like to use Eclipse development environment, we have a guide of how to set it up for plugin development here.
Explanation of classes
The plugin is very simple. It has classes for UI and classes for accessing BioPortal through rest services.
The slot plugin class (main UI) is: edu.stanford.bmir.protegex.bp.ref.BioPortalReferenceWidget
The panel in which you can search and import from BioPortal is: edu.stanford.bmir.protegex.bp.ref.SearchPanel
The reference model class that creates the reference instances and makes the actual import is: edu.stanford.bmir.protegex.bp.ref.ReferenceModel
If you would like to change the way that references are imported, change the method (or create your own):
public Instance createReference(String bpBaseUrl, String conceptId, String ontologyVersionId, String preferredName, String ontologyName)
The package org.ncbo.stanford
contains the classes that can can invoke a rest service to BioPortal and that can read in the results. All you need to invoke the services is in the org.ncbo.stanford.util
package.
Invoke BioPortal Rest services
The BioPortal Rest services are documented here.
For example, to invoke a search in BioPortal, you can use the utility class:
BioportalSearch sd = new BioportalSearch(); String urlStr = "http://rest.bioontology.org/bioportal/search/Myocardial%20Infarct?pagesize=20&pagenum=1"; try { Page p = sd.getSearchResults(new URL(urlStr)); SearchResultListBean data = p.getContents(); for (SearchBean searchBean : data.getSearchResultList()) { System.out.println(searchBean.getPreferredName() + "\t" + searchBean.getOntologyDisplayLabel()); } } catch (MalformedURLException e) { e.printStackTrace(); } catch (IOException e) { e.printStackTrace(); }
For an example implementation see: edu.stanford.bmir.protegex.bp.ref.SearchPanel.getSearchResultsHtml()
To get all details of a concept, you can use the following code:
BioportalConcept c = new BioportalConcept(); String urlStr = "http://rest.bioontology.org/bioportal/concepts/39002/BRO:Resource"; try { ClassBean cb = c.getConceptProperties(new URL(urlStr)); System.out.println(cb.getFullId() + " " + cb.getId() + " " + cb.getLabel()); Map<Object, Object> relationsMap = cb.getRelations(); for (Map.Entry<Object, Object> e : relationsMap.entrySet()) { System.out.println(e.getKey() + ": " + e.getValue()); } } catch (MalformedURLException e) { e.printStackTrace(); }
Where to get help and complain
If you have any problems with the plugin, please post a message on the protege mailing list (protege-owl for OWL ontologies, and protege-discussion for Protege frames ontologies). Instructions for posting on the lists are here:
http://protege.stanford.edu/community/lists.html
Before posting, please check the email list archives, whether the question has already been answered:
Thank you!