1 |
Adhere to the OBO Foundry guidelines |
2 |
Represent a unique non-overlapping knowledge domain (also known as orthogonality) |
3 |
Willingness to express and integrate multiple, evidence-based classification systems in the chosen domain |
4 |
Logically structured with a well-defined scope |
5 |
May contain relationships and dependencies to other reference ontologies |
6 |
Represent accurate science supported by evidence |
7 |
Open source and Creative Commons CC-BY or CC-0 license (https://creativecommons.org/) |
8 |
Must be widely used in annotation and data capture |
9 |
Support both inter- and intra-specific needs with species agnostic (core) and specific (extensions) resources that work together |
10 |
Sustainable funding sources |
11 |
Human resources to manage (i.e., curators, editors, and developers) |
12 |
Established ontology management system, including roles and responsibility |
13 |
Must be designed to answer both the computing and community needs |
14 |
Must explicitly identify the communities of reference |
15 |
Centralized maintenance of the validated content, and distributed contribution and access |
16 |
Ontology quality assurance by experts in the field of knowledge |
17 |
Reducing reliance on internal processes and data stewardship networks |