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Description
As a taxonomist, when describing a beetle I use images to support my observations. In general, those images end up on a PDF or a static jpg online, accompanied by a caption, so that only other humans would be able to potentially extract information from those images.
Are there (or can we come up with) ways to annotate regions of interest in an image, and tie that to a term in an anatomy ontology?
When an image has been annotated, where would those annotations live? Would they be part of a file's metadata?
Also, if annotations are associated with metadata, how to visualize them and, would the annotations be lost when segmenting/processing the annotated image?
Some background on the taxonomy side:
- Ramírez et al. (2007) Linking of Digital Images to Phylogenetic Data Matrices Using a Morphological Ontology. Systematic Biology 56, 283–294. https://doi.org/10.1080/10635150701313848
Some additional background on the biodiversity informatics side:
- Girón et al. (2024) Meeting Report for the Phenoscape TraitFest 2023 with Comments on Organising Interdisciplinary Meetings. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 8: e115232. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.8.115232 [Project I - Images to traits]
- Baskauf et al. (2023) Implementation Experience Report for Controlled Vocabularies Used with the Audubon Core Terms subjectPart and subjectOrientation. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 7: e94188. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.94188
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