Text-mining for Medicinal Plants
Damien1972 writes "Researchers are exploring ancient texts for medicinal plant information using text-mining. From Shamans and Robots: Bridging the Past and Future of Ethnobotany and Bioprospecting: "A new procedure that is being explored by researchers to track and classify useful medicinal plant species may negate some of the issues surrounding the acquisition of knowledge ... This method involves a practice called "text-mining," in which old botanical works are scoured for references to medicinal plants.""
This would be a good use for Wikipedia, each plant's information should be put into into this opensource encyclopedia.
I see this as part of the problem, getting the information out, reporting plants drug use out of books into a format more people can use. Perfect use for Wikipedia.
of reading. I can see how this might help with people who don't read greek, but with machine translation, that's not an issue.
As the saying goes; a month in the lab can save you a whole day in the library. Is this really new in a good way? Given the fact that many plants have alternate names, some have the same name, etc. it seems that familiarity with one's subject material is not a particularly useful thing to shortcut-out. Consider, for example, the parable of the 'mustard seed' in the gospels. A grown mustard plant is described as a great tree. Huh?! Even when people are familiar with the text, translations of old plant names are often difficult.
I'd just as soon read a machine translation of the bible or tartouffe than rely upon this technique. In fact, I'd sooner read a machine translation of the bible. Even if it mistranslated things, at least it'd be less likely to gloss the text. But that's not so much a problem with ethnobotany.
"Text mining" is a solution which found the wrong problem.
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It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
Interesting information in this article, but it is really badly written, as if by a college kid the morning the paper is due. Sloppy thinking.
The "negative" is that "westerners" (a laughable term when talking about, say, indigenous Brazilians vs US Drug companies, as this article begins with) ask native Shamen for information about useful plants, then take that powerful knowledge and make lucrative drugs without allowing compensation to flow back to the indigenous people.
OK, that is a negative, I concede. But. The article says that the issue is somewhat negated by not asking the shamen, but going to the written record.
Anyway, what ancient texts do the Yanomamo people have, anyway? Are there ancient medicinal texts of Madagascar? The cultures that tend to have these texts probably don't have the issues this article is talking about.
Seems like a case of an author with information to present, but no good idea for an angle.
-Tut
Health-Hack.com
Ooops. We wiped out that plant's habitat to build a highway.
Ooops...Football stadium.
Ooops...McMansions.
Nothing left to see here. Move along and look for another miracle plant.
- Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
This would be a good use for Wikipedia, each plant's information should be put into into this opensource encyclopedia.
I see this as part of the problem, getting the information out, reporting plants drug use out of books into a format more people can use. Perfect use for Wikipedia.
Getting the information out is part of the problem however there's more to it than simply listing it on Wikipedia or other databases, whether open 'sauce' or proprietary. As the article points out it takes people to study the culture of indigenous peoples and learn how they use different plants which brings up a problem indegenous people are having with outsiders, biopiracy. Scientists, usually working for pharmaceutical or other companies learn about some medical treatment using a plant or part of the plant then they go and slap a patent on it. An example of this is the ayahuasca vine or Banisteriopsis caapi of the Amazon Forest. American Indian tribes throughout the Amazon have been using it for centuries if not millenia and the Coordinating Body for the Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA), a group of Amazonian people had to fight a patent the US Patent and Trademark Office issued to International Plant Medicine Corporation based in California for the plant. Here's a short article on it, Amazon Indigenous Win Patent Dispute Over Ayahuasca. A search for "biopiracy" on Google News returns 25 results from the Amazon to New Zealand. A Google search of the web returns more than 70,000 results. An article was posted here on /. in November about how an Iraqi law required farmers to pay a licensing fee just in case they used GE seed. Iraq law Requires Seed Licenses
FalconShould there be a Law?
Last post!