A Distributed Information Services Architecture to Support Biomarker Discovery in Early Detection of Cancer
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| Amsterdam, Netherlands December 04-December 06 |
Sean Kelly, California Institute of Technology, USA
Chris Mattmann, California Institute of Technology, USA; University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA
Qing Xiao, California Institute of Technology, USA
Jane Oh, California Institute of Technology, USA
Donald Johnsey, National Cancer Institute National Institutes of Health, USA
Informatics in biomedicine is becoming increasingly interconnected via distributed information services, interdisciplinary correlation, and crossinstitutional collaboration. Partnering with NASA, the Early Detection Research Network (EDRN), a program managed by the National Cancer Institute, has been defining and building an informatics architecture to support the discovery of biomarkers in their earliest stages. The architecture established by EDRN serves as a blueprint for constructing a set of services focused on the capture, processing, management and distribution of information through the phases of biomarker discovery and validation.
Citation:
Daniel Crichton, Sean Kelly, Chris Mattmann, Qing Xiao, J. Steven Hughes, Jane Oh, Mark Thornquist, Donald Johnsey, Sudhir Srivastava, Laura Essermann, William Bigbee, "A Distributed Information Services Architecture to Support Biomarker Discovery in Early Detection of Cancer," e-science, pp.44, Second IEEE International Conference on e-Science and Grid Computing (e-Science'06), 2006
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