October 10th, 2007

I find it funny that I'm currently being inundated with drug comment spam, just after Danny Ayers pointed out the fact that the pharmacy industry is adopting the 'orphaned' semantic web:

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the Internet standards arbiter that developed the HTML content description protocol, released a new standard several years ago called the semantic Web. Operating on linkages between data called triplets, in which two URL-based pieces of information are connected by a recognizable relationship in a kind of subject-verb-object arrangement, the semantic Web gained far less momentum with programmers than did HTML, which can be searched on the basis of written language.

However, the so-far-neglected standard, which relies on extensive and standardized coding of Web-searchable data and documents, may soon be adopted by the big drug companies, where a coterie of information technology (IT) specialists see its potential in organizing R&D data and expediting drug discovery and development—where a triplet might include a specific compound and a functional relationship of that compound to a specific cellular receptor.

"Many pharmaceutical companies are exploring the use of the semantic Web," says Susie Stephens, principal research scientist for discovery and development informatics at Eli Lilly & Co. It is one of many avenues Lilly is investigating to develop a research IT regime, she says.

The entire article is surreal. And funny! Triplets!

Perhaps someone went home with one too many "semantic web" samples.

Comments
1
Danny - 3:10 am 10/11/2007

Hat-tip to Eric Neumann who mentioned that page on public-semweb-lifesci list.

I wonder to what extent Semantic Web developers are exploring the use of pharmaceuticals…

2
Shelley - 2:41 pm 10/11/2007

Thanks for the origination.

I was rather surprised not to see this mentioned by any other RDF/semweb weblogger. Is it that we're worried about 'offending' the industry, and therefore they'll drop support for RDF? Others not find it funny?

I mean, triplets.

3
Phil - 3:16 am 10/15/2007

Course, pharma is exactly where I'd expect to see SemWeb surfacing in the 'real' (commercial) world - it's huge in the life sciences, as I understand it. The idea that it's an 'orphaned' or 'neglected' technology is a bit rich, though. (And 'triplets' is funny.)

Thanks to all those who have contributed to the discussion. Comments are now closed, but you can contact the author of the post directly.