Knowledge and Data Management White Papers

Temporal Representation for Gene Networks: Towards a Qualitative Temporal Data Mining

Overview Processing literature (i.e., text corpora) to capture gene regulation events is not easy and can be driven by the final data representation. The paper proposes to build, manually, an example of temporal representation (whole gene networks for coat formation in Bacillus Subtilis). The temporal representation is based on a generalised formal language theory (S-languages). The paper proposes an algorithm to link bags of relations with representation, by ordering interactions. In this paper, starting from the network made manually from text data. The paper shows that S-languages are quite relevant to encapsulate gene properties, and infer knowledge across timestamped gene relations found in texts.

Further White Paper Details
PublisherInderscience Enterprises File FormatPDF
Date PublishedJanuary 2008
FormatWhite Papers   
Topics

Accelerating Enterprise Data Governance Part 1

In the first of this series of three white papers, Mike Ferguson of Intelligent Business Strategies defines what data governance is and then looks at the requirements that need to...

Data Governance for Master Data Management and Beyond

There is growing interest on behalf of both data management professionals and senior business managers to understand the motivations, mechanics, and benefits of instituting data governance within an organization. This...

Getting Started with Master Data Management

Master data management forms part of an overall enterprise governance program that aims to establish trusted data throughout the enterprise. This white paper from Mike Ferguson of Intelligent Business Strategies...

Five Steps to More Valuable Enterprise Data

Companies worldwide struggle with inconsistent, inaccurate or unreliable data - and often don't know how to build more useful corporate information. This white paper examines a five-step method for...

The Evolution of Integration

Once upon a time life and information systems were simple. Then one day somebody let Pandora out of her box. Someone said -can't we add new requirements to these systems?...


Quick Sitemap Links: