This is Radhu Ladani, a Post-Graduate Student from the Bharati Vidyapeeth University of Pune.
Being a part of the CEVOpen project is a truly remarkable experience for me.
The CEVOpen team is committed to create a single entry point for searching Open scientific literature and Phytochemistry is a key element of this project.
My project is focused on Phytochemical ontologies for analyzing the literature on essential oils and began with an objective:
To create a corpus of 500 papers of medicinal activity and essential oils by utilizing the getpapers toolkit, which is a web scraper for open-source scientific literature.
To create a dictionary of Medicinal activity and Essential oil plants, we are tapping into the potential of wikidata by converting it to dictionaries via a SPARQL query and then using the ami dict tool to convert it and a significant feature of these dictionaries is their multilingualism.
To get the possible insights from the open scientific literature regarding the association between the various essential oil plants and compounds with their medicinal activity, we used our own search engine ami which searches and analyses the terms in the project repository and displays the term's frequency and histogram.
The co-occurrence of ami search result reveals some interesting insights such as:
Antioxidant, Antimicrobial, Antifungal, and Anti-inflammatory properties are common.
Carvacrol and thymol are two essential oil compounds that are frequently mentioned and Essential oil plants like Rosmarinus Officinalis, Origanum vulgar, Thymus vulgaris and Ocimum basilicum are commonly present in Open scientific literature.
Countries like China and India are frequently mentioned in papers about medicinal activity and essential oils.
We used GitHub as a storage portal because we believe in the OpenNotebook philosophy, where all work is done as OpenNotebookScience, where all activities are completely transparent and in real-time.
I am extremely grateful to NIPGR. I would like to express my sincere gratitude to Dr. Gitanjali Yadav and Dr. Peter Murray Rust for their valuable guidance and life-impacting mentoring. This endeavor would not have been possible without the constant and unconditional support of all my co-interns.