Lecture, Presentation, Training materials

HemaFAIR Lecture 3 - Introduction to Conceptual Models

This lecture, delivered by Dr Cesar Bernabe (Amsterdam University Medical Center), introduces the role of conceptual models in the FAIRification and semantic harmonisation of health and life-science data. It explains how conceptual modelling provides a high-level, technology-independent representation of domain knowledge, enabling a shared understanding of data structures, relationships and constraints across heterogeneous sources.

The session presents the key components of conceptual models and their function as a bridge between real-world clinical and research concepts and their implementation in common data models and interoperable infrastructures. Within the HemaFAIR context, the lecture demonstrates how conceptual models support data integration, standardisation and reuse for rare disease and haemoglobinopathy research, facilitating consistent data representation and enabling downstream interoperability and federated analysis.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14759883

Licence: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

Contact: Dr Sotiroula Chatzimatthaiou at sotiroula@cing.ac.cy

Keywords: FAIR principles, Research Data Management, Open Science, Data sharing, Data reuse, Metadata, European research projects, HemaFAIR, Conceptualization

Target audience: Researchers, Data Scientist, Data stewards, Data managers, Students

Resource type: Lecture, Presentation, Training materials

Version: 1

Status: Active

Prerequisites:

No prerequisites. This material is intended as a first introduction to the Biomedical Ontologies

Learning objectives:

-Define what a conceptual model is and describe its purpose in the data lifecycle
-Explain the difference between conceptual, logical and physical data models
-Recognise how conceptual models support semantic interoperability and FAIR data
-Identify the main components of a conceptual model (entities, attributes, relationships and constraints)
-Describe how conceptual models act as a bridge towards common data models and standardised implementations
-Understand their application in rare disease and haemoglobinopathy research within the HemaFAIR framework

Date published: 2025-01-27

Authors: Cesar Bernabe

Contributors: Marco Roos, Petros Kountouris

Scientific topics: FAIR data, Data management, Open science


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