Mark Musen

Last updated
Mark Musen
Alma mater
Known for Protégé
Scientific career
Fields Biomedical informatics

Mark Alan Musen is a Professor of Biomedical Informatics and of Biomedical Data Science at Stanford University; at Stanford, he directs the Stanford Center for Biomedical Informatics Research. Musen's research focuses on open science, data stewardship, intelligent systems, and biomedical decision support. [1] [2] Musen has led the development of Protégé since the late 1980s; [3] today, Protégé is the most "widely used domain-independent, freely available, platform-independent technology for developing and managing terminologies, ontologies, and knowledge bases" in a range of application domains. [4]

Contents

Musen is the founding co-editor in chief of the journal Applied Ontology. [2]

Education

Musen received a Bachelor of Science in biology from Brown University in 1977. He attended Brown's Alpert Medical School, graduating in 1980 with an M.D. Musen completed his residency in internal medicine at Stanford University Medical Center in 1983. After residency, he completed a doctoral degree in Medical Information Sciences at Stanford in 1988. [2]

Career

Between 1988 and 1995, Musen was an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine. He was appointed Director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Informatics Research in 1993 and promoted to Professor of Medicine in 2002.

Related Research Articles

In computer science and information science, an ontology encompasses a representation, formal naming, and definition of the categories, properties, and relations between the concepts, data, and entities that substantiate one, many, or all domains of discourse. More simply, an ontology is a way of showing the properties of a subject area and how they are related, by defining a set of concepts and categories that represent the subject.

The Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) is a compendium of many controlled vocabularies in the biomedical sciences. It provides a mapping structure among these vocabularies and thus allows one to translate among the various terminology systems; it may also be viewed as a comprehensive thesaurus and ontology of biomedical concepts. UMLS further provides facilities for natural language processing. It is intended to be used mainly by developers of systems in medical informatics.

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Protégé is a free, open source ontology editor and a knowledge management system. The Protégé meta-tool was first built by Mark Musen in 1987 and has since been developed by a team at Stanford University. The software is the most popular and widely used ontology editor in the world.

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Yuval Shahar

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Natalya Fridman Noy is a Russian-born American computer scientist who works at Google Research in Mountain View, CA. She is best known for her work with the Protégé ontology editor and the Prompt alignment tool, for which she and co-author Mark Musen won the classic paper award from the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) in 2018. Noy served as president of the Semantic Web Sciences Association in 2012–2017, and her Ontology 101 Tutorial is one of the most cited and downloaded documents on the semantic web.

References

  1. "Mark Musen". Stanford HAI. Retrieved 2022-02-05.
  2. 1 2 3 "Mark Musen's Profile | Stanford Profiles". profiles.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2022-02-05.
  3. Gennari, John H.; Musen, Mark A.; Fergerson, Ray W.; Grosso, William E.; Crubézy, Monica; Eriksson, Henrik; Noy, Natalya F.; Tu, Samson W. (2003-01-01). "The evolution of Protégé: an environment for knowledge-based systems development". International Journal of Human-Computer Studies. 58 (1): 89–123. doi:10.1016/S1071-5819(02)00127-1. ISSN   1071-5819.
  4. Rubin, Daniel L.; Noy, Natalya F.; Musen, Mark A. (August 9, 2007). "Protégé: A Tool for Managing and Using Terminology in Radiology Applications". Journal of Digital Imaging. 20 (Suppl 1): 34–46. doi:10.1007/s10278-007-9065-0. ISSN   0897-1889. PMC   2039856 . PMID   17687607.