Media Advisory: Open-Source Ontology Software Conference Begins July 23 at Stanford

STANFORD, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 10, 2006--Stanford Medical Informatics is hosting an international conference July 23-26 on the Protege system, an open-source software platform that is increasingly being used to organize knowledge online and to develop complex computer systems that address problems ranging from cancer research to troubleshooting automotive assembly lines.

The software, which was developed at Stanford, is used to model ontologies -- ways of classifying the meanings and hierarchical relationships among terms and concepts in a given subject. While ontologies predate the information age and can be traced to the ancient Greek philosophers, they have taken on greater significance in recent years in computer science with the growing need to make sense of oceans of data.

"It's like a catalog of all the entities that are known about some discipline, which are represented in a way that both people and computers can reason about them," said Mark Musen, MD, PhD, professor of medicine (medical informatics), who created the original version of Protege in the late 1980s.

This will be the ninth international Protege conference, and more than 100 computer scientists from universities and private industry groups from at least 20 nations have already registered. Tutorials and workshops will be held on the first day at the James H. Clark Center; talks and posters will be presented the following three days at the Fairchild Auditorium.

"The scope of this conference is large," said Daniel Rubin, MD, assistant professor of medicine (radiology) and research scientist at Stanford Medical Informatics. "It's for people who are interested in how computers represent knowledge across any domain, or people who work with complex problems and need to represent these concepts."

In general, ontologies can be used to model concepts in fields as diverse as theology, information science and artificial intelligence. For example, by allowing researchers to draw together data from scores of different randomized medical trials, Protege helps them better understand diseases. But it is also being used in systems that troubleshoot problems on manufacturing assembly lines. Protege users range from the World Health Organization to DaimlerChrysler.

Interest in Protege has grown since 2001 when it became open source, allowing any user to download the software for free. Protege has about 50,000 registered users, including 7,000 "die-hards" who subscribe to an extremely active e-mail discussion group, Musen said.

"It is much easier and faster to get projects started when open-source tools are available," says Michael Uschold, a senior researcher at Boeing, who will deliver the conference's keynote address on July 23. "Protege is a tremendous boon to academic research."

For more information and to register for the conference, please visit http://protege.stanford.edu/conference/2006. Registration is free for full-time Stanford students, $400 per attendee for Stanford faculty, staff and non-Stanford full-time students, and $700 per attendee for all others. The registration deadline is July 14.

Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and patient care at its three institutions -- Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical center's Office of Communication & Public Affairs at http://mednews.stanford.edu.

Contacts

Stanford University Medical Center
Aditi Risbud, 650-724-5372 (Print Media)
asrisbud@stanford.edu
Margarita Gallardo, 650-723-7897 (Broadcast Media)
mjgallardo@stanford.edu
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