TY - JOUR AU - Anika Oellrich AU - Ramona Walls AU - Ethalinda Cannon AU - Steven Cannon AU - Laurel Cooper AU - Jack Gardiner AU - Georgios Gkoutos V AU - Lisa Harper AU - Mingze He AU - Robert Hoehndorf AU - Pankaj Jaiswal AU - Scott Kalberer AU - John Lloyd AU - David Meinke AU - Naama Menda AU - Laura Moore AU - Rex Nelson AU - Anuradha Pujar AU - Carolyn Lawrence AU - Eva Huala AB - Plant phenotype datasets include many different types of data, formats, and terms from specialized vocabularies. Because these datasets were designed for different audiences, they frequently contain language and details tailored to investigators with different research objectives and backgrounds. Although phenotype comparisons across datasets have long been possible on a small scale, comprehensive queries and analyses that span a broad set of reference species, research disciplines, and knowledge domains continue to be severely limited by the absence of a common semantic framework. BT - Plant methods C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25774204?dopt=Abstract DA - 2015 DO - 10.1186/s13007-015-0053-y J2 - Plant Methods LA - eng N2 - Plant phenotype datasets include many different types of data, formats, and terms from specialized vocabularies. Because these datasets were designed for different audiences, they frequently contain language and details tailored to investigators with different research objectives and backgrounds. Although phenotype comparisons across datasets have long been possible on a small scale, comprehensive queries and analyses that span a broad set of reference species, research disciplines, and knowledge domains continue to be severely limited by the absence of a common semantic framework. PY - 2015 EP - 10 T2 - Plant methods TI - An ontology approach to comparative phenomics in plants. VL - 11 SN - 1746-4811 ER -