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Editorial
. 2007 Jan 19:8:17.
doi: 10.1186/1471-2105-8-17.

Publishing perishing? Towards tomorrow's information architecture

Affiliations
Editorial

Publishing perishing? Towards tomorrow's information architecture

Michael R Seringhaus et al. BMC Bioinformatics. .

Abstract

Scientific articles are tailored to present information in human-readable aliquots. Although the Internet has revolutionized the way our society thinks about information, the traditional text-based framework of the scientific article remains largely unchanged. This format imposes sharp constraints upon the type and quantity of biological information published today. Academic journals alone cannot capture the findings of modern genome-scale inquiry. Like many other disciplines, molecular biology is a science of facts: information inherently suited to database storage. In the past decade, a proliferation of public and private databases has emerged to house genome sequence, protein structure information, functional genomics data and more; these digital repositories are now a vital component of scientific communication. The next challenge is to integrate this vast and ever-growing body of information with academic journals and other media. To truly integrate scientific information we must modernize academic publishing to exploit the power of the Internet. This means more than online access to articles, hyperlinked references and web-based supplemental data; it means making articles fully computer-readable with intelligent markup and Structured Digital Abstracts.Here, we examine the changing roles of scholarly journals and databases. We present our vision of the optimal information architecture for the biosciences, and close with tangible steps to improve our handling of scientific information today while paving the way for an expansive central index in the future.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A schematic illustration of the proposed Structured Digital Abstract for a single genetics article [19]. This document – a machine-readable summary of pertinent findings arranged for simple database deposit – would be coded in XML and submitted alongside the manuscript for final publication. Inset; the same information presented in a hierarchical text-based format, similar to the final arrangement in the actual XML document.

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