Abstract
Phenotypic differences among species have long been systematically itemized and described by biologists in the process of investigating phylogenetic relationships and trait evolution. Traditionally, these descriptions have been expressed in natural language within the context of individual journal publications or monographs. Thus, this rich store of phenotype data has been largely unavailable for statistical and computational comparisons across studies or integration with other biological knowledge.Here we describe Phenex, a platform-independent desktop application designed to facilitate efficient and consistent annotation of phenotypic similarities and differences using Entity-Quality syntax, drawing on terms from community ontologies for anatomical entities, phenotypic qualities, and taxonomic names. Phenex can be be configured to load ontologies for different taxonomic groups. The graphical user interface was developed for, and tested by, evolutionary biologists accustomed to working with lists of taxa, characters, character states, and character-by-taxon matrices.Annotation of phenotypic data using ontologies and globally unique taxonomic identifiers will allow biologists to better leverage decades of work in systematics and comparative morphology and contribute to an ever more useful web of linked biological data.
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Balhoff, J., Dahdul, W., Kothari, C. et al. Phenex: Ontological Annotation of Phenotypic Diversity. Nat Prec (2009). https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2009.4068.1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2009.4068.1