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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.
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Proceedings Article
Towards a Semantic Grid Architecture
TL;DR: A Reference Semantic Grid Architecture is needed that extends the Open Grid Services Architecture by explicitly defining the mechanisms that will allow for the explicit use of semantics and the associated knowledge to support a spectrum of service capabilities.
Book ChapterDOI
Data Management in Computational Systems Biology : Exploring Standards, Tools, Databases, and Packaging Best Practices
Natalie J. Stanford,Martin Scharm,Paul D. Dobson,Martin Golebiewski,Michael Hucka,Varun B. Kothamachu,David P. Nickerson,Stuart Owen,Jürgen Pahle,Ulrike Wittig,Dagmar Waltemath,Carole Goble,Pedro Mendes,Jacky L. Snoep +13 more
TL;DR: This chapter explores the different data and model standards that assist with structuring, describing, and sharing within computational systems biology, and highlights the popular standards and sharing databases within computational system biology.
Book ChapterDOI
Description logics: OWL and DAML + OIL
TL;DR: In this chapter, Description Logics are introduced and it is explained how the rich expressivity of OWL can be used to model the complexities of biology and bioinformatics.
BookDOI
The Semantic Web – ISWC 2014: 13th International Semantic Web Conference, Riva del Garda, Italy, October 19-23, 2014. Proceedings, Part I
Peter Mika,Tania Tudorache,Abraham Bernstein,Chris Welty,Craig A. Knoblock,Denny Vrandecic,Paul Groth,Natasha Noy,Krzysztof Janowicz,Carole Goble +9 more
TL;DR: Data integration, search and query answering, Ontology based data access and query rewriting and reasoning, and Natural language processing and information extraction.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Open workflow infrastructure: a research agenda
TL;DR: A research agenda to build an infrastructure with a flexible design to work on an Internet-wide scale to incorporate workflow editing, sharing and enactment capabilities directly into the Internet, thus making distributed applications available and usable in a wide range of pervasive settings.