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Fully-formal Advanced Statements (Super-Pattern)

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Type Description This is the description of the type of nanopublications you can create through this page.

This nanopublication makes a statement that in the context of a thing of a certain type (e.g. a mouse), another thing of a certain type (e.g. a gene) tends to have a relation (such as causing) to another thing of a certain type (e.g. a disease) in the same context.

Note that the context is not a reference to a general topic or field. It denotes the class for the context in which the relations happen. If each relation is happening in a human, for example, such as a certain condition leading to a certain symptom, then the context class should be 'human'.

The technical background of the super-pattern can be found in this publication.

Example Nanopublication A nanopublication contains as main content a statement in the assertion part (shown in blue) encoded in a way that computers can understand. It is expressed as one or more subject-relation-object structures, each shown on a separate line, where the identifier of the subject (left) is connected to the identifier of the object (right) via the identifier of the relation type (middle).

  http://purl.org/np/RAu49Eu8w-jwQw6hZ2ZgYOYqmF9HpqxZgItA4oy4N8M-4 RAu49Eu8w-   "in humans, headache is mostly caused by dehydration"

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Here you find more information about this type of nanopublication. You can create a new one on the left, and check out the ones you have already created, as candidates for your Data Science submission.