Overview of FEED, the feeding experiments end-user database.


Autoria(s): Wall, CE; Vinyard, CJ; Williams, SH; Gapeyev, V; Liu, X; Lapp, H; German, RZ
Data(s)

01/08/2011

Formato

215 - 223

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21700574

icr047

Integr Comp Biol, 2011, 51 (2), pp. 215 - 223

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10195

1557-7023

Relação

Integr Comp Biol

10.1093/icb/icr047

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

England

Resumo

The Feeding Experiments End-user Database (FEED) is a research tool developed by the Mammalian Feeding Working Group at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center that permits synthetic, evolutionary analyses of the physiology of mammalian feeding. The tasks of the Working Group are to compile physiologic data sets into a uniform digital format stored at a central source, develop a standardized terminology for describing and organizing the data, and carry out a set of novel analyses using FEED. FEED contains raw physiologic data linked to extensive metadata. It serves as an archive for a large number of existing data sets and a repository for future data sets. The metadata are stored as text and images that describe experimental protocols, research subjects, and anatomical information. The metadata incorporate controlled vocabularies to allow consistent use of the terms used to describe and organize the physiologic data. The planned analyses address long-standing questions concerning the phylogenetic distribution of phenotypes involving muscle anatomy and feeding physiology among mammals, the presence and nature of motor pattern conservation in the mammalian feeding muscles, and the extent to which suckling constrains the evolution of feeding behavior in adult mammals. We expect FEED to be a growing digital archive that will facilitate new research into understanding the evolution of feeding anatomy.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #Animals #Biological Evolution #Data Interpretation, Statistical #Databases, Factual #Feeding Behavior #Internet #Jaw #Mammals #Muscles #Phylogeny #Sucking Behavior #User-Computer Interface #Vocabulary, Controlled