Aalto introduces a search engine for biomedical experiments - Science|Business

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-07-13

Summary:

“Helsinki Institute for Information Technology HIIT, a joint research centre of Aalto University and University of Helsinki, has taken a significant step towards a search engine for scientific knowledge. Led by the Director of HIIT, Professor Samuel Kaski of Aalto University, a research group for statistical machine learning and bioinformatics has developed a search engine for biomedical research with which bioscientists can search for common aspects in masses of measured data – and do better science based on the search results. Drawing connections between different studies is hard, laborious and still based on keyword searches. Reaching the level of measured data would be crucial, particularly in bioinformatics, tells Samuel Kaski. Molecular biology has been one of the pioneers of open data: open bio-data banks have existed for a long time, and as measurement technologies have improved, one can extract information of thousands of molecules from just one sample. On the other hand, the issue of how to best use these vast data banks in research, remains equally open. In sciences like biology, knowledge mainly accumulates conceptually, unlike in physics for instance, where one can take steps back in formulas and fix false assumptions. With our information retrieval methods, biologists can compare their datasets to thousands of other sets and find biological processes to which the data may be related. Living biological systems function and change constantly, so there is bound to be a lot of noise. Before similarities between different datasets can be discerned, one must know which kind of similarities to look for amidst all the noise in the first place. The rest can be learned from the data gathered... Statistical models and computational methods can, for example, break down gene expression – the construction of genetic information into functioning parts of a living organism – in order to outline defining features in different processes. A doctoral researcher in Professor Kaski's group, José Caldas, developed in his dissertation presented at Aalto University in April 2012 methods for the retrieval of genomic information. With the retrieval methods one can compare raw measurement data to thousands of similar kinds of data sets. Caldas' research has already contributed to the discovery of exceptional gene expressions in mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer linked to asbestos exposure...”

Link:

http://bulletin.sciencebusiness.net/news/75802/Aalto-introduces-a-search-engine-for-biomedical-experiments

Updated:

08/16/2012, 06:08

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.biology oa.new oa.data oa.search oa.tools oa.biomedicine oa.u.helsinki oa.modeling oa.data.analysis oa.aalto.u oa.hiit oa.bioinformatics oa.announcements

Authors:

abernard

Date tagged:

07/13/2012, 15:13

Date published:

07/13/2012, 15:37