Manager 20Dec2012: Difference between revisions

From GO Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "*Scope of GO. We have had a series of term requests from someone who works for the Ontology Adverse Events (OAE) who is using GO to annotate the action of specific chemicals (dru...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
*Scope of GO. We have had a series of term requests from someone who works for the Ontology Adverse Events (OAE) who is using GO to annotate the action of specific chemicals (drugs), see [https://sourceforge.net/users/abrayguo/]. These processes are probably (but not necessarily) also carried out by proteins so we could probably add the terms on that basis, but the question is more general: to what degree do we as a project support this type of 'non-standard' annotation? And if not in GO, where else does it live? [Jane & David]
*'''Scope of GO'''. We have had a series of term requests from someone who works for the Ontology Adverse Events (OAE) who is using GO to annotate the action of specific chemicals (drugs), see [https://sourceforge.net/users/abrayguo/]. These processes are probably (but not necessarily) also carried out by proteins so we could probably add the terms on that basis, but the question is more general: to what degree do we as a project support this type of 'non-standard' annotation? And if not in GO, where else does it live? [Jane & David]


[[Category:Meetings]]
[[Category:Meetings]]

Revision as of 09:08, 13 December 2012

  • Scope of GO. We have had a series of term requests from someone who works for the Ontology Adverse Events (OAE) who is using GO to annotate the action of specific chemicals (drugs), see [1]. These processes are probably (but not necessarily) also carried out by proteins so we could probably add the terms on that basis, but the question is more general: to what degree do we as a project support this type of 'non-standard' annotation? And if not in GO, where else does it live? [Jane & David]