Link to this page
Computer Retrieval of Information on Scientific Projects Thesaurus
Last uploaded:
September 25, 2013
Acronym | CRISP |
Visibility | Public |
Description | The Computer Retrieval of Information on Scientific Projects (CRISP) Thesaurus was developed by the National Institutes of Health for use in the CRISP database of research projects funded by the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS). CRISP contains over 8,000 preferred terms that are grouped hierarchically into 11 domains. The 11 domains are: - anatomy - behavioral/social science - biology - chemical - disease/disorder - food science/technology - medicine - named group - organism - physical science technology/technique |
Status | Retired |
Format | UMLS |
Contact | Anita Ghebeles, af8d@nih.gov |
Categories | Health |
Groups | Unified Medical Language System |
License Information | This ontology is made available via the UMLS. Users of all UMLS ontologies must abide by the terms of the UMLS license. |
No views of CRISP available
Jump to:
Id | http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/CSP/4007-0013
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/CSP/4007-0013
|
---|---|
Preferred Name | tissue engineering |
Definitions |
application of bioengineering and biomimetic principles for the restoration, repair, replacement, and assembly of functional tissues and organs; application of engineering and life sciences in development of artificial tissues or organs using living cells and different types of biomaterial matrices such as hydrogel, 3 dimentional mesh scaffolds or biodegradable polymers; engineered tissues can restore, maintain, or improve tissue function.
|
Synonyms |
tissue soldering
biohybrid implant
tissue glueing
tissue repair
bioartificial prosthesis
bioprosthesis
biopolymer
tissue welding
bioartificial organ
|
Type | http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#Class |
All Properties
definition | application of bioengineering and biomimetic principles for the restoration, repair, replacement, and assembly of functional tissues and organs; application of engineering and life sciences in development of artificial tissues or organs using living cells and different types of biomaterial matrices such as hydrogel, 3 dimentional mesh scaffolds or biodegradable polymers; engineered tissues can restore, maintain, or improve tissue function. |
---|---|
altLabel |
tissue soldering
biohybrid implant
tissue glueing
tissue repair
bioartificial prosthesis
bioprosthesis
biopolymer
tissue welding
bioartificial organ
See more
See less
|
prefLabel | tissue engineering
|
DID | 4007-0013
|
notation | 4007-0013
|
Inverse of RB | |
Inverse of RO | |
subClassOf | |
Semantic type UMLS property |
See more
See less
|
type | |
tui |
T109
T123
T074
T040
T063
T061
T062
See more
See less
|
cui |
C0872295
C0599700
C0005557
C0872296
C0597989
C0043240
C0599701
C0872292
C0005554
C0596171
See more
See less
|
Add comment
Delete | Subject | Author | Type | Created |
---|---|---|---|---|
No notes to display |
- Problem retrieving properties:
Notes
Filter:
Add NCBO Web Widgets to your site for CRISP
Widget type | Widget demonstration |
---|---|
|
Step 2: Follow the Instructions
For more help visit NCBO Widget Wiki |
|
Example 1 (start typing the class name to get its full URI)
Example 2 (get the ID for a class) Example 3 (get the preferred name for a class) Step 2: Follow the Instructions
For more help visit NCBO Widget Wiki |
|
Step 2: Follow the InstructionsCopy the code below and paste it to your HTML page <iframe frameborder="0" src="/widgets/visualization?ontology=CRISP&class=http%3A%2F%2Fpurl.bioontology.org%2Fontology%2FCSP%2F1393-3397&apikey=YOUR_API_KEY"></iframe> For more help visit NCBO Widget Wiki |
|
Step 2: Follow the InstructionsCopy the code below and paste it to your HTML page <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/widgets/jquery.ncbo.tree.css"> <script src="/widgets/jquery.ncbo.tree-2.0.2.js"></script> <div id="widget_tree"></div> var widget_tree = $("#widget_tree").NCBOTree({ apikey: "YOUR_API_KEY", ontology: "CRISP" }); You can also view a detailed demonstration For more help visit NCBO Widget Wiki |