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Carole Goble

Researcher at University of Manchester

Publications -  532
Citations -  31208

Carole Goble is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Workflow & Ontology (information science). The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 511 publications receiving 26919 citations. Previous affiliations of Carole Goble include University of Southampton & Victoria University of Manchester.

Papers
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Book ChapterDOI

Pedro ontology services: a framework for rapid ontology markup

TL;DR: The requirements for an annotation tool for developing ontologies are examined, and the design and implementation of the Pedro Ontology Service Framework is described, which seeks to fulfill these requirements.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Framing the community data system interface

TL;DR: It is speculated that an interface framed as a device to secure data citations would positively influence researchers choices and Libertarian paternalism could be included in the Community Data Systems' design toolkit as a viable alternative to the current practices.
Book ChapterDOI

Semantic Constraints in a Medical Information System

TL;DR: A knowledge representation formalism called Structured Meta Knowledge (SMK) is presented which describes conceptual medical terms and their occurrences in individual patient records and the prototype clinical workstation PEN&PAD which uses SMK is introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developing a strategy for computational lab skills training through Software and Data Carpentry: Experiences from the ELIXIR Pilot action.

TL;DR: The Pilot action was described, which introduced the Carpentry training model to the ELIXIR community, aimed at increasing the number of skilled life scientists and building a sustainable training community in this field.
Posted Content

A Community Roadmap for Scientific Workflows Research and Development.

TL;DR: WorkflowsRI and ExaWorks as mentioned in this paper organized two virtual "Workflows Community Summits" (January and April, 2021) to provide a view of the state of the art, identify crucial research challenges in the workflows community, articulate a vision for potential community efforts, and discuss technical approaches for realizing this vision.