Title: Digital Library Development in the Asia Pacific
1- Digital Library Development in the Asia Pacific
- Digital Library Future Research
- Case Study in International Disease Surveillance
Hsinchun Chen, Ph.D. ????????, ??? ?? McClelland
Professor, Director, Artificial Intelligence Lab
NSF COPLINK Center Dept. of Management
Information Systems University of Arizona
Acknowledgement NSF DLI1, DLI2, NSDL NIH, NLM,
NCI NSF DG, DOJ, DOD, DHS
2Outline
- DL After the First Decade
- Asian Digital Library Development
- NSF Cyberinfrastructure Program and NSF Chatham
Digital Library Workshop - Case Study International Disease Surveillance
BioPortal (from FMD to Avian Influenza)
3Introduction
- Digital libraries represent a form of information
technology in which social impact matters as much
as technological advancement. - Over the past decade the development of digital
library activities has been steadily increasing. - International conferences in digital library have
proliferated from their roots of ACM and IEEE
Digital Conferences (and then the Joint
Conference on Digital Libraries, JCDL) to the
European version of ECDL (European Conference on
Digital Libraries) and the Asian version of ICADL
(International Conference of Asian Digital
Libraries).
4DLI Program Implementation History
Digital Libraries Initiative Phase 1
(1994-98) Sponsors NSF, DARPA, NASA 76
Proposals, 6 Awards, 25M total Digital Libraries
Initiative Phase 2 (1999-03) Sponsors NSF,
DARPA, NASA, NIH/NLM, NEH Partners IMLS,
Smithsonian Institution, NARA 300 Proposals, 34
Awards, 48M total International Digital
Libraries Cooperative Research Initiative
(1999-03) Sponsors NSF, JISC, DFG 60
Proposals, 16 Awards (6 with JISC, 4 with DFG),
6M NSF total Intl DL Cooperative Research
Initiative and Applications (2002- ) Sponsors
NSF, JISC, DFG 50 Proposals, Awards in process
(4 with JISC, 2 with DFG)
5Select Digital Library Development Milestones
6Digital Library Development in Asia Pacific (An
ICADL Analysis)
7Overview of ICADL
- ICADL (International Conference of Asian Digital
Libraries) - Overview of ICADL
- 80 participants in Hong Kong in 1998 (host CS)
- 150 participants in Taipei, Taiwan in 1999
(host LIS) - 300 participants in Seoul, Korea in 2000 (host
CS) - 600 participants in Bangalore, India in 2001
(host LIS) - 400 participants in Singapore in 2002 (host
LIS) - 350 participants in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in
2003 (host NLM) - 350 participants in Shanghai, China in 2004
(host LIS, CS) - ICADL 2005, Bangkok, Thailand in December 2005
-
8Summary on Participation of ICADL Conferences
9Increase of Papers Accepted in ICADL
10Increase of Countries Represented in ICADL
11Topical Analysis in ICADL
- Digital library research is not restricted to
only technical aspects it involves social
aspects as well. - From a technological perspective, digital
libraries are a set of electronic resources that
are built to help create, search, and use
information. - From a sociological perspective, digital
libraries are constructed by a community of users
who use the system to better support their
informational needs and applications. (Borgman,
1998)
12Topical Analysis Social Aspect
- Multicultural Issues
- In Asian digital library applications, there are
countless scenarios that involve creating and
distributing locally produced information
collections. - e.g.
- INFLIBNT project aimed at creating a digital
library of theses and dissertations from India
(Vijayakumar and Murthy, 2001). - The Tsinghua University Architecture Digital
Library developed a prototype system to provide
rich, valuable resources for traditional Chinese
architecture research and education (Xing et al.,
2002).
13Topical Analysis Social Aspect
- Asian Languages and Cross-lingual Issues
- A crucial feature of Asian digital libraries is
the ability to work in various local languages. - Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Indian, Malaysian, and
Thai language processing techniques have been
reported. - e.g.
- Wong and Li (1998) and Yang et al. (1998) both
studied Chinese information retrieval and
discussed issues related to Chinese language
indexing techniques. - Theeramunkong et al. (2002) investigated using
n-gram and HMM approaches for Thai OCR
application.
14Topical Analysis Social Aspect
- Asian Languages and Cross-lingual Issues (contd)
- Cross-lingual information retrieval between
English and Asian languages has been more widely
studied in ICADL conferences than in other
western digital library conferences. - e.g.
- Qin et al. (2003) presented an English-Chinese
cross-lingual Web retrieval system in the
business domain. - Sugimoto (2001) presented a multilingual document
browsing tool and its metadata creation carried
out at ULIS.
15Samples of Significant Digital Library Research
in Asia Pacific Capturing Cultural Heritage and
Indigenous Knowledge
16International Islamic Digital Library Malaysia
- Focus
- To provide information on Islam and Muslims
around the world - To act as a referral centre to direct information
enquiries on Islam to the appropriate sources - To promote sharing and exchange of knowledge
among scholars of Islam and those interested in
it - To enable the world to understand Islam better
- Partners
- National Library of Malaysia
- Multimedia Development Corporation
- International Islamic
- University Malaysia Library
17International Islamic Digital Library Malaysia
- Contents
- Books,
- Manuscripts
- Special collections,
- Theses and articles,
- Journals and conferences papers,
- Pictures, audios and videos
- Service
- Both in Arabic and English
- Category browse
- Browse search
- Keyword search
- Expert search
- Broadcast search
http//www.iidl.net
18Technology Development for Indian Languages
India
- Focus
- To develop information processing tools to
facilitate human machine interaction in Indian
languages and multi-lingual knowledge resources. - To support RD efforts in the area of information
processing in Indian Languages and to support
research on knowledge tools representation,
integration, compression and learning
methodologies. - To consolidate technologies thus developed for
Indian languages and integrate these to develop
innovative user products and services.
http//www.tdil.mit.gov.in
19Technology Development for Indian Languages
India
- Funding
- Ministry of Information Technology, India
- Partners
- Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur Hindi,
Nepali - Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai Marathi,
Konkani - Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati
Assamese, Manipuri
http//www.tdil.mit.gov.in
20Technology Development for Indian Languages
India
- Contents
- Multi-lingual dictionaries,
- Thesauri,
- Educational software,
- Encyclopedia,
- Gyan-nidhi creative writing system,
- Translation support systems,
- OCR,
- Text-to-speech speech recognition system,
- Pocket translator,
- Personal digital assistants,
- Reading machine for blinds deaf,
- Portals,
- e-governance / e-commerce / e-skills.
http//www.tdil.mit.gov.in
21China Digital Library China
- Focus
- Strengthen and protect the cultural tradition and
heritage - Enhance the usage and sharing of information
resource - Serve the national projects and related researches
http//www.nlc.gov.cn
22China Digital Library China
- Funding
- 10th Five-year Project
- Ministry of Culture, China
- Partners
- National Library of China
- Tsinghua University
- Peking University
- China Academy of Science
- China Academy of Social Science
- etc. (more than 100 different types of libraries
and partners)
http//www.nlc.gov.cn
23China Digital Library
http//www.nlc.gov.cn
24Research Directions for Digital Libraries (The
Next Decade)- JCDL 2004, 2005, 2006- NSF
Cyberinfrastructure Program- NSF Chatham
Digital Library Workshop
25Overview of JCDL 2004
- Joint IEEE-CS/ACM Conference on Digital Libraries
(JCDL), Tucson, AZ - Theme Global Reach and Diverse Impact.
- Co-Chairs
- Hsinchun Chen, Howard Wactlar, Ching-chih Chen
26Strong Participation in JCDL04
27JCDL 2005 and 2006
- JCDL 2005, Denver, Colorado
-
- JCDL 2006, Charlotte, North Carolina
-
28Social Networks,Cyberinfrastructure (CI)and
Meta CI
- Daniel E. AtkinsSchool of Information Dept. of
Elec. Engr. Comp. Sci.University of
MichiganAnn Arboratkins_at_umich.eduNovember 2005
29CI Genealogy Movement
30NSF Blue Ribbon Advisory Panel on
Cyberinfrastructure
- a new age has dawned in scientific and
engineering research, pushed by continuing
progress in computing, information, and
communication technology, and pulled by the
expanding complexity, scope, and scale of todays
challenges. The capacity of this technology has
crossed thresholds that now make possible a
comprehensive cyberinfrastructure on which to
build new types of scientific and engineering
knowledge environments and organizations and to
pursue research in new ways and with increased
efficacy.
31(No Transcript)
32NSF states intent toplay a leadership role
- NSF will play a leadership role in the
development and support of a comprehensive
cyberinfrastructure essential to 21st century
advances in science and engineering research and
education. - NSF is the only agency within the U.S. government
that funds research and education across all
disciplines of science and engineering. ... Thus,
it is strategically placed to leverage,
coordinate and transition cyberinfrastructure
advances in one field to all fields of research. - From NSF Cyberinfrastructure Vision for the 21st
Century Discovery
33Cyberinfrastructure-enhancedKnowledge
Communities (Networks)
Outcomes New Ideas, New Tools, Education
Career Development, Outreach
Attributes Collaborative, Multidisciplinary,
Geographically Distributed, Inter-institutional
Broader Application to other disciplines and
types of activity.
Specific Cyber Environments collaboratories,
grids, e-science community, virtual teams,
community portal, ...
Cyber-infrastructure Services Equipment,
Software, People, Institutions
Computation, Storage, Communication and Interface
Technologies
From Cummings Kiesler (2003) report on KDI
Initiative ultidisciplinary scientific
collaborations, see http//www.p2design.com/papers
/kdi.pdf
34Cyberinfrastructureincludes both
- Technology Infrastructure (creation and
provisioning) - middleware, portals, HPC, hybrid
(IP lambda) networks, .... - Social Infrastructure (competition cooperation,
IP policies, incentive structure, cost, etc.)
35From CI Advisory Panel Report
towards functionally complete CKCs
36Transforming the Information Landscape Research
Directions for Digital Libraries
Report of the NSF Workshop on Research Directions
for Digital Libraries
- Ronald L. Larsen
- School of Information Sciences
- University of Pittsburgh
Knowledge Lost in Information, NSF Award No.
IIS-0331314
37Workshop Background
- DLI over, DLI2 winding down
- What is next?
- Did we finish the job? Are we done?
- What have we learned?
- What constitutes DL research?
- Does it influence other disciplines?
- Should DL change from
- Initiative to Program?
38Emerging U.S. Vision for DLs
- Next generation digital libraries will be
- A confluence of resources, technology and
infrastructure - An intersection of national priorities and
scientific goals - A common testbed for all computer and information
science research (sub)disciplines - Federated resources serving individuals,
institutions and governments simultaneously - A progression from information to knowledge
39Users
- Cognitive Completion
- MS spell-checker for facts and knowledge
- Task and user context sensitive
- Do what I mean
- Find what I need
- Be aware of what I know
- Collaboration
- Identifying the collegial context
- Providing contextual guidance
- Managing personal libraries
- All that is seen and heard
- Personal memory assistant
40National priorities influence IT research agenda
Advances in Science and Engineering
Information Technology Research
Economic Prosperity and Vibrant Civil Society
National and Homeland Security
Digital Libraries form the Enabling Resources,
Technology Infrastructure
41National priorities influence IT research agenda
- Advances in Science and Engineering
- Advance the frontiers of science and engineering
research and education - Examples include those that collect, disseminate,
and analyze observational or experimental data,
or data from models or simulations - Economic Prosperity and Vibrant Civil Society
- Human and socio-technical aspects of current and
future distributed information - Topics include business, work, health,
government, learning, and community, and their
related policy implications. - National and Homeland Security
- Robust Information Technology to protect critical
infrastructures and support the understanding of
threats to national security - Examples include collaborative knowledge
environments, knowledge discovery, medical
informatics, information extraction and fusion,
cross-linguality, spoken language and imagery,
social network analysis
42Recommendations
- 20M / year for new U.S. research
- Search, context, extraction, ubiquity,
productivity - 40M /year for sustaining evolving resources in
the U.S. - Acquisition, access, usage, stewardship,
management - Coordinate with Advanced Cyberinfrastructure
Program
43DL Research After the First Decade Global
Reach and Diverse Impact!Can DL help with
international security?Can DL help save human
life and improve patient well-being?
44Case Study International Disease Surveillance
-- BioPortal
45BioPortalDisease and Bioagent Information
Sharing, Surveillance, Analysis, and Visualization
- Research Team
- University of Arizona
- University of California, Davis
- Kansas State University
- Arizona Department of Public Health
- University of Utah
- New York State Department of Health/HRI
- California Department of Health Services/PHFE
- U.S. Geological Survey
- The SIMI Group
- Acknowledgements NSF, ITIC, DHS, DOD/AFMIC,
IDIWC, AZDPS
46Research Partners and Supports
- University of Arizona
- University of California, Davis
- Kansas State University
- University of Utah
- Arizona Department of Public Health
- New York State Department of Health/HRI
- California Department of Health Services/PHFE
- U.S. Geological Survey
- The SIMI Group
- NSF
- CIA/ITIC
- DHS
- DOD/AFMIC
- CDC
- AZDPS
47Outline
- Project Background
- BioPortal V1.0 Achievements
- System Architecture
- System Functionalities
- BioPortal Collaboration Framework
- New Developments
- International Foot-and-mouth Disease Monitoring
- Syndromic Surveillance
- Livestock Health Surveillance
48BioPortal Background
Acknowledgment NSF, ITIC, NYSDH, CDHS,
USGS (Drs. Kvach and Ascher)
49Background (I)
- In September, 2002, representatives of 18
different agencies, including DOD, DOE, DOJ, DHS,
NIH/NLM, CDC, CIA, NSF, and NASA, were convened
to discuss disease surveillance. - An interagency working group called Disease
Informatics Senior Coordinating Committee (DISCC)
was established. - DISCC established an Infectious Disease
Informatics Working Committee (IDIWC) to survey
the field and identify gaps. - IDIWC developed requirements for a National
Infectious Disease Informatics Infrastructure
(NIDII).
50Background (II)
- In June, 2003, IDIWC was charged with the task of
developing one or more rapid prototype systems to
demonstrate interoperability and innovation
across species and jurisdictions. - Botulism and West Nile virus were selected as
diseases. - States of New York and California were selected
as partners. - The University of Arizona was chosen as
integrator and was provided with a supplement to
an existing NSF grant.
51BioPortal Project Goals
- Demonstrate and assess the technical feasibility
and scalability of an infectious disease
information sharing (across species and
jurisdictions), alerting, and analysis framework. - Develop and assess advanced data mining and
visualization techniques for infectious disease
data analysis and predictive modeling. - Identify important technical and policy-related
challenges in developing a national infectious
disease information infrastructure.
52BioPortal V1.0 Accomplishments
- Prototype system design and development
- Initial design and implementation of
interoperable messaging backbones - Live prototype systems
- Preliminary user evaluation
- Information sharing
- Data sharing agreements/memoranda of
understanding (MOUs) developed - Many disease datasets integrated into the portal
- Analysis and visualization
- Hotspot analysis research
- Spatial-Temporal Visualizer (STV)
53Information Sharing Infrastructure Design
Portal Data Store (MS SQL 2000)
Data Ingest Control Module Cleansing /
Normalization
Info-Sharing Infrastructure
Adaptor
Adaptor
Adaptor
SSL/RSA
SSL/RSA
XML/HL7 Network
PHINMS Network
New
NYSDOH
CADHS
54Data Access Infrastructure Design
55BioPortal Collaboration Framework
- A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) is used to
document the relationship between parties that
will be sharing data - Who the entities are and how they will act
independently and cooperatively - What the mutual interests, benefits, and purposes
of sharing data are - How each party will maintain control over and
share their resources, and what each party shall
provide to the other (e.g., system accounts,
portal access) - Which types of data are to be shared (e.g., dead
bird surveillance)
56Datasets Integrated WNV, BOT
57Communications/Messaging
- Scalable, flexible, light-weight, and extendible.
Easy to include - New diseases
- New jurisdictions
- New techniques!
- Messaging infrastructure installed and tested
- NYSDOH-UA PHIN MS
- CADHS-UA Regional message broker
- NWHC-UA PHIN MS
- XML generation/conversion
- NY_DeadBird, NY_Alerts, NY_BotHuman, NY_WNVHuman,
NY_CaptiveAnimal, NY_Mosquito - CA_BotHuman, CA_WNVHuman, CA_DeadBird,
CA_Chicken, CA_Mosquito - USGS_Epizoo
58BioPortal Research Framework
- BioPortal Demo Develop the system for
demonstration purposes using scrubbed data.
Refine system functionality and performance based
on user feedback. - BioPortal Operation Develop the system for
production mode with real data and real users. - BioPortal Research Continue to develop
advanced technologies and practical sharing
policies. Expand to new diseases and
jurisdictions.
59BioPortal Prototype Systems
60Spatio-Temporal Data Mining Hotspot Analysis
- A hotspot is a condition indicating some form of
clustering in a spatial and temporal distribution
(Rogerson Sun 2001 Theophilides et al. 2003
Patil Tailie 2004). - For WNV, localized clusters of dead birds
typically identify high-risk disease areas
(Gotham et al. 2001). - Automatic detection of dead bird clusters using
hotspot analysis can help predict disease
outbreaks and aid in effective allocation of
prevention/control resources.
61Existing Hotspot Analysis Approach SaTScan
- The spatial scan statistical techniques
implemented in SaTScan are widely used to detect
and evaluate disease outbreaks (Kulldorff 2001). - NYSDOH has used SaTScan to develop an early
warning system for WNV (Gotham et al. 2001). - An important factor considered by spatial scan
statistical analysis is the baseline. - The significance of the density of dead birds
depends on the historical distribution of bird
deaths, human population, and so on.
62Other Hotspot Analysis Approaches CrimeStat and
RSVC
- Hotspot analysis techniques applied to crime
analysis CrimeStat (Levine 2002). - CrimeStats Risk-Adjusted Nearest Neighbor
Hierarchical Clustering (RNNH) Uses a kernel
density estimation obtained from baseline data to
adjust the threshold that controls whether data
points can be grouped together. - Risk-Adjusted Support Vector Machine Clustering
(RSVC) It combines the power and flexibility of
support vector machine-based clustering and the
risk adjustment idea of RNNH.
63Case Study (NY WNV)
- On May 26, 2002, the first dead bird with WNV was
found in NY - Based on NYs test dataset
140 records
224 records
March 5
May 26
July 2
new cases
baseline
64(No Transcript)
65Dead Bird Hotspots Identified
66Hotspot Analysis Findings
- RSVC delivers similar recall levels and higher
precision than SaTScan. - RNNH matches RSVC precision, but has very low
recall. - RSVC significantly outperforms other methods in
the F-measure. - Techniques could be complementary for different
hotspot analysis tasks.
67Spatial-Temporal Visualization
- Integrates four visualization techniques
- GIS View
- Periodic Pattern View
- Timeline View
- Central Time Slider
- Visualizes the events in multiple dimensions to
identify hidden patterns - Spatial
- Temporal
- Hotspot analysis
- Phylogenetic (planned)
68(No Transcript)
69(No Transcript)
70(No Transcript)
71BioPortal New Developments
- NSF Infectious Disease Informatics Grant (2004-9)
- International Foot-and-Mouth Disease BioPortal
(2005-6) FMD Lab, UC Davis - Human Syndromic Surveillance System Arizona
State Department of Health (2005-6) - Livestock Syndromic Surveillance System Kansas
State University RSVP-A (2005-6)
72New Research Directions
- Analytical Algorithms
- Prospective hotspot analysis auto baseline
discovery - Spatial-Temporal correlation analysis
- Dynamic Network Analysis
- Visualization
- International FMD news visualization
- Phylogenetic Spatial-Temporal visualization
- Syndromic Surveillance
- Syndromic surveillance system survey
- Emergency room chief complaint syndromic
classification - Livestock syndromic surveillance
73Extended BioPortal Research Framework
- BioPortal Demo
- BioPortal Operation
- BioPortal Research
- FMD BioPortal A dedicated instance of
BioPortal customized for International
Foot-and-Mouth disease monitoring. Additional
functionalities such as gene sequence analysis
and FMD News are added - BioPortal Syndromic Surveillance A specialized
BioPortal instance that processes chief
complainants using a hybrid method of ontology
and knowledge rules - BioPortal Livestock A BioPortal instance
devoted in Livestock syndromic surveillance case
management and data analysis
74International FMD BioPortal
Acknowledgment DHS, DOD, UC Davis (Drs. Thurmond
and Lynch)
75Introduction
- Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is the top disease
on the Office International des Epizooties (OIE)
List A, which can infect all cloven-hoofed
animals. - FMD is the most contagious infectious diseases of
livestock animals - Massive shedding of virus and contamination of
the environment. - Transmitted by direct or indirect contact
(droplets), animate vectors (humans), inanimate
vectors (vehicles - Serologically diverse with seven distinct types
(A, O, C, SAT1, SAT2, SAT3, Asia1), which makes
diagnosis and vaccination problematic, and
genetic diversity likely. - Endemic in Africa, Asia, Middle East and South
America - Potential cost for U.S. outbreaks gt10 billion
- Broader economic impact trade and travel
restrictions.
76FMD Information Model
77International FMD BioPortal Goals
- Real-time, web-based situational awareness of FMD
outbreaks worldwide through the establishment of
an international information sharing and analysis
system - FMDv characterization at the genomic level
integrated with associated epidemiological
information and modeling tools to forecast
national, regional, and/or international spread
and the prospect of import into the U.S. and the
rest of North America - Web-based crisis management of resourcesfacilitie
s, personnel, diagnostics, and therapeutics
78Research Plans
- Global FMD epidemiological data
- (Near) real-time data collection
- Web-based information sharing and analysis
- International FMD news
- Indexed collection of global FMD news
- Search and visualization of the FMD news via the
web - FMD genetic/sequence data
- Predictive model using phylogenetic, spatial, and
temporal information to stop FMD at the boarder - Visualization for FMD event in time, space, and
genetic space
79Preliminary Global FMD Dataset
- Provider UC Davis FMD Lab
- Information sources reference labs and OIE
- Coverage 28 countries globally
- Time span May, 1905 March, 2005
- Dataset size 30,000 records of which 6789
records are complete - Host species Cattle, Caprine, Ovine, Bovine,
Swine, NK, Elephant, Buffalo, Sheep, Camelidae,
Goat
80Global FMD Coverage in BioPortal
81International FMD News
- Provider UC Davis FMD Lab
- Information sources Google, Yahoo, and open
Internet sources - Time span Oct 4, 2004 present (real-time
messaging under development) - Data size 460 events (6/21/05)
- Coverage 51 countries
- (Africa11, Asia16,
- Europe12, Americas12)
82Searching FMD News
- http//fmd.ucdavis.edu/
- Searchable by
- Date range
- Country
- Keyword
83Visualizing FMD News on BioPortal
84FMD Genetic Information Analysis
- Genome clustering analysis
- Phylogenetic clustering
- Spatial clustering
- Temporal clustering
- Hotspot detection among gene sequences
- Create a tree structure based on semantic
distance between gene sequences. - Automatically detect the dense portion of the
tree. - Identify the connection between the semantic
cluster and the geographic pattern of gene
sequences.
85FMD Genetic Visualization
- Goal Extend STV to incorporate 3rd dimension,
phylogenetic distance - Include a phylogenetic tree.
- Identify phylogenetic groups and color-code the
isolate points on the map. - Leverage available NCBI tools such as BLAST.
- Proof of concept SAT 2 3 analysis
- Data 54 partial DNA sequence records in South
Africa received from UC Davis FMD Lab
(Bastos,A.D. et al. 2000, 2003) - Date range 1978-1998
- Countries covered South Africa, Zimbabwe,
Zambia, Namibia, Botswana
86Sample FMD Sequence Records
Color-coded View (MEGA3)
Textual View of Gene Sequence
87Phylogenetic Trees
88Phylogenetic Tree of Sample FMD Data
Group6
Group1
Identify 6 groups within 2 major families (MEGA3
based on sequence similarity)
Group2
Group5
Group4
Group3
89Genetic, Spatial, and Temporal Visualization of
FMD Data
Phylogenetic tree color coded
Isolates locations color coded
Isolates appearances in time
90FMD Time Sequence Analysis
First family cases appeared throughout the period
2nd family cases exist before 1993 and a comeback
lately
Second family cases existed before 1993 and
reappeared later after 1997
91FMD Periodic Pattern Analysis
2nd family concentrated in Feb. while 1st family
spread evenly
92Locations of Family 1 records
Selected only groups 1, 2, and 3 and found a
spatial cluster
93Locations of Family 2 records
Sparse isolate locations
Selected only groups 4, 5, and 6
94BioPortal Future Work
- Complete open source, generic BioPortal
architecture and system - Develop multi-lingual BioPortal
- Incorporate other diseases, e.g., avian
influenza, SARS - Solicit partners and expand test sites
- Continue infectious disease informatics research
95For more informationBioPortal web site
http//www.bioportal.org
96A Little Promotion
97Library as the PlaceLibrarian in
ContextRole of a librarian in a digital
world?Challenges and opportunities facing the
library and information profession?
98For more informationHsinchun
Chenhchen_at_eller.arizona.eduAI Lab web site
http//ai.arizona.edu