scispace - formally typeset
D

Dietrich Rebholz-Schuhmann

Researcher at National University of Ireland, Galway

Publications -  161
Citations -  4156

Dietrich Rebholz-Schuhmann is an academic researcher from National University of Ireland, Galway. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ontology (information science) & Annotation. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 154 publications receiving 3899 citations. Previous affiliations of Dietrich Rebholz-Schuhmann include Wellcome Trust & University of Zurich.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Text processing through Web services

TL;DR: Whatizit is a suite of modules that analyse text for contained information, e.g. any scientific publication or Medline abstracts, and offers access to EBI's in-house installation via PMID or term query.
Journal ArticleDOI

EBIMed---text crunching to gather facts for proteins from Medline

TL;DR: EBIMed improves access to information where proteins and drugs are involved in the same biological process, e.g. statements with GO annotations of proteins, protein-protein interactions and effects of drugs on proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Text-mining solutions for biomedical research: enabling integrative biology.

TL;DR: The latest advancements in automated literature analysis are explored and its contribution to innovative research approaches are explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Automatic recognition of conceptualization zones in scientific articles and two life science applications

TL;DR: The means to facilitate automatic access to the scientific discourse of articles by automating the recognition of 11 categories at the sentence level, which are called Core Scientific Concepts (CoreSCs), which provide the structure and context to all statements and relations within an article are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

MeSH Up

TL;DR: The annotation of biomedical texts using controlled vocabularies such as MeSH can be automated to improve text-only IR and the automatic MeSH annotation system proposed is highly scalable and generates improvements in IR comparable with those observed for manual annotations.