Module covering bibliographic references as defined in OMG specification SNP (Single Nucleotide Polymorphism). Source of the data. Individual or institute. Street address. Contact e-mail. Fax number. Name of the institution Name of the Source. Telephone number. The original source of the data. A Citation. REF BibRef OMG standard. Not identifiable (Defined in model) The BibliographicReference class is the core of the data model. It is a super-class for all specialized citation types, but it can also be instantiated and represent an additional type not specifically defined in this specification. Defines a date associated with an event in the life cycle of the cited resource, when this resource became available. Usually, it is a date of publishing, however, for not yet published resources, it can be a date of creation. Describes the physical or digital manifestation of the cited resource. It can have very different content depending on the citation type. Defines a language of the intellectual contents of the cited resource. The recommendation is to use values as defined by RFC1766 which includes a two-letter Language Code (taken from the ISO639 standard, followed optionally by a two-letter Country Code (taken from the ISO3166 standard). For example, "en" for English, "fr" for French, or "en-uk" for English used in the United Kingdom. Another possibility is to use MARC List of Languages. Specifies information about rights over the cited resource. Typically, it contains a rights management statement for the resource, or it refers to a service providing such information. Rights information often encompasses Intellectual Property Rights [IPR], Copyrights, and various Property Rights. A title given to the cited resource (a name by which the resource is formally known) It defines the nature or genre of the cited resource. Although a working draft of Dublin Core Types recommends a type classification, the proposed types are mostly out of scope of this specification. The majority of cited resources would fall in the same category "text". For the future, however, Dublin Core is considering the addition of subtypes to the high level types, or other ways of making sub-categories Bibliographic resources. The most obvious examples are authors, but it includes also publishers and other contributors. These attributes define the active participants. They may be persons, organizations, or even services. A publisher is responsible for making the resource available. The authors and contributors are in ordered lists. The authors and contributors are responsible for creating the contents of the cited resource. There is no formal definition of how this 60 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms Specification responsibility is divided between them. However, the authors are usually primary creators while contributors may be illustrators, translators, or other creative providers. Their role may be specified in a separate attribute in dynamic properties It defines the extent or scope of the content of the cited resource. It can include spatial location (a place name or geographic co-ordinates), temporal period (a period label, date, or date range), or both. Finally, it can have additional dynamic properties such as jurisdiction). A place or area name or geographic coordinates in string format. A period label, date, or date range. Defines information related to the citation itself rather than to the cited resource. last date the citation entry was changed Some bibliographic repositories consist of several, or even many, databases. The subset helps to locate the citation. A brief account of the content of the cited resource. It can be either the abstract, or the table of contents, or both. It can be written in a language different from the language of the cited resource. Format of the abstract expressed in MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) Language of the description A list of divisions (chapters or articles) and the pages on which they start Summary of the main points of the publication. Format of the table of contents expressed in MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions). Technical report Printed communication from a scientific organization. A treatise advancing a new point of view resulting from original research; usually a requirement for an advanced academic degree. Provider of software service A referred web address Cost of accessing the information Rough size of the retrieved reference entry. Uniform Resource Locator A document granting an inventor sole rights to an invention. Patent identifier Name of the patent office. E.g. European Patent Office Type of a patent: e.g. 'utility', 'design' and 'plant' A written work or composition that has been published; usually printed on pages bound together. Name of the edition. International Standard Book Number Name of a collection of books. Volume number of the book in a series. Article that forms part of a book. Non fictional prose forming an independent part of a publication. First page in a article Last page in a article Article, especially a scientific one that forms part of a journal. Integer indicating the ordering of the issue within a volume. Additional identifier for a separate supplement of the issue. Volume number of the journal. Typically all issues of a journal published within a year belong to the same volume A class describing a journal; a periodical dedicated to a particular subject. The citations referring to the journal articles have a reference to this class. There are only few explicit attributes defined, the rest are accessible using dynamic properties. Accepted abbreviated form of the journal name. The ISSN (International Standard Serial Number) is an eight-digit number which identifies periodical publications as such. It defines the topic of the content of the cited resource.