In the time it takes a human life sciences researcher to read one research article machines can process hundreds of thousands of articles. An unco-ordinated army of bots, crawlers, and other software agents are active day and night on the Internet discovering, ingesting, and analyzing research content. Many of these agents are designed to help researchers rapidly filter the ever-expanding research record and surface the articles and findings most relevant to their work. For these software agents to be most effective, they need to understand the content they are reading in a manner similar to an expert human reader. (What are the main concepts being discussed and what are the main findings asserted? What is this research article telling us that is new and what is supporting or contradicting past findings?). This is where semantic enrichment comes into play — semantic enrichment adds structured machine-readable metadata to life science articles to assist software agents in ‘reading’ the content in a manner similar to a human researcher. In the present study, I'll define the mechanism of semantic enrichment of life sciences content, examine the benefits it is bringing to researchers today, and preview promising avenues for future benefits.
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December 2018
Issue Editors
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This issue of Emerging Topics in Life Sciences was guest edited by Professor Sheila Graham, Chair of Publications Committee and Chair-elect Biochemical Society (Executive Management Committee). The issue looks at the new challenges and opportunities for life sciences researchers in the rapidly changing world of scholarly publishing. Cover image courtesy of Macrovector via Shutterstock.com.
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December 21 2018
Semantic enrichment of life sciences content: how it works and key benefits for researchers Available to Purchase
Jake Zarnegar
1Silverchair, Charlottesville, VA, U.S.A.
Correspondence: Jake Zarnegar ([email protected])
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Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Received:
November 01 2018
Revision Received:
November 28 2018
Accepted:
November 30 2018
Online ISSN: 2397-8562
Print ISSN: 2397-8554
© 2018 The Author(s). Published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society and the Royal Society of Biology
2018
Emerg Top Life Sci (2018) 2 (6): 769–773.
Article history
Received:
November 01 2018
Revision Received:
November 28 2018
Accepted:
November 30 2018
Citation
Sheila Graham, Jake Zarnegar; Semantic enrichment of life sciences content: how it works and key benefits for researchers. Emerg Top Life Sci 21 December 2018; 2 (6): 769–773. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/ETLS20180168
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