Genes & Nutrition (Apr 2018)

ONS: an ontology for a standardized description of interventions and observational studies in nutrition

  • Francesco Vitali,
  • Rosario Lombardo,
  • Damariz Rivero,
  • Fulvio Mattivi,
  • Pietro Franceschi,
  • Alessandra Bordoni,
  • Alessia Trimigno,
  • Francesco Capozzi,
  • Giovanni Felici,
  • Francesco Taglino,
  • Franco Miglietta,
  • Nathalie De Cock,
  • Carl Lachat,
  • Bernard De Baets,
  • Guy De Tré,
  • Mariona Pinart,
  • Katharina Nimptsch,
  • Tobias Pischon,
  • Jildau Bouwman,
  • Duccio Cavalieri,
  • the ENPADASI consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12263-018-0601-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background The multidisciplinary nature of nutrition research is one of its main strengths. At the same time, however, it presents a major obstacle to integrate data analysis, especially for the terminological and semantic interpretations that specific research fields or communities are used to. To date, a proper ontology to structure and formalize the concepts used for the description of nutritional studies is still lacking. Results We have developed the Ontology for Nutritional Studies (ONS) by harmonizing selected pre-existing de facto ontologies with novel health and nutritional terminology classifications. The ONS is the result of a scholarly consensus of 51 research centers in nine European countries. The ontology classes and relations are commonly encountered while conducting, storing, harmonizing, integrating, describing, and searching nutritional studies. The ONS facilitates the description and specification of complex nutritional studies as demonstrated with two application scenarios. Conclusions The ONS is the first systematic effort to provide a solid and extensible formal ontology framework for nutritional studies. Integration of new information can be easily achieved by the addition of extra modules (i.e., nutrigenomics, metabolomics, nutrikinetics, and quality appraisal). The ONS provides a unified and standardized terminology for nutritional studies as a resource for nutrition researchers who might not necessarily be familiar with ontologies and standardization concepts.

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