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Re: [ontology-summit] Slight amendment to Gerry's request, plus a synop

To: "Ontology Summit 2009" <ontology-summit@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
From: "Mason, Howard (UK)" <Howard.Mason@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 9 Apr 2009 09:19:02 +0100
Message-id: <4B5102D6FD665447821D45C621B5393C75AEBF@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Very good note, and clearly indicative of the challenges that we try to address 
in the eBusiness MoU Management Group which sits across a number of ISO, IEC, 
ITU committees, UN/CEFACT, OASIS, OAGIS, SWIFT, GS1 and CEN.  ISO TC68 
participates through their secretariat    (01)

It is always a challenge to identify reusable components or patterns from 
existing standards which can save development effort.  The end result of 
failure to recognise such synergies is duplicate or incompatible standards.    (02)

A good example has been recent work in IEC TC3 to catalogue identification 
schemes, which has revealed the huge duplication that exists in areas such as 
organisation and individual ids.    (03)



For the purposes of archiving, any recipient of this message is deemed to be 
the intended recipient, and there is no restriction on reproduction.    (04)


Howard Mason
Corporate IT Office
Tel: +44 1252 383129
Mob: +44 780 171 3340
Eml: howard.mason@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
BAE Systems plc
Registered Office: 6 Carlton Gardens, London, SW1Y 5AD, UK
Registered in England & Wales No: 1470151     (05)

-----Original Message-----
From: ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bill Nichols
Sent: 09 April 2009 02:52
To: Ontology Summit 2009
Subject: Re: [ontology-summit] Slight amendment to Gerry's request,plus a 
synopsis request    (06)

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     Keep this in mind if you answer this message.     (08)

Sira - nicely said.      (09)

At the risk of the beating the point to death, I want to throw in my two 
pennies.    (010)

Over the past couple of decades, every field of study has become more complex, 
in part simply because the number of specialists in each field has grown as the 
number of educated people has increased.  This is presenting us with problem 
sets that we have little experience or historical practice to fall back on -- 
because we haven't been here before.  It's completely rational for someone who 
is an expert in one area to be skeptical of inputs from another field -- the 
more you know about an area the more aware you are of the subtleties and shades 
of meaning required to accurately describe aspects of it.    (011)

The common thread across these fields is technology -- I don't know of any area 
of expertise where there is a rapidly accumulating and expanding body of 
research/knowledge that is not at a minimum using email/web sites/etc., to 
communicate about it.  In general, it's a reasonably safe assumption that some 
form of computerized data collection, experimentation, and/or analysis is 
driving the evolving consensus in any given field of study.  (Obviously, this 
is nothing new to anyone on this list.)    (012)

There are two areas where I see problems in everyday life that, at least it 
seems to me, ontologies and related approaches can play a major role in helping 
us collectively to make sense, and use of, the exploding increases in available 
information.  I'll loosely describe these as     (013)

1) Cross-field fertilization and reference; and
2) Managing accumulating information stores.    (014)

There are a couple of others, but I'm thinking this is already going to be too 
long, so I'll leave them out for the moment.    (015)

First there's (1), the case of logical solutions to similar problems that lie 
across industry boundaries.  These do not have to have an obvious relationship.     (016)


An example from the standards world:      (017)

As Mike and I mentioned in our presentation, the issue of identifiers is a 
major problem for the financial services industry -- an example of a "paved 
over cow path".  Identifiers require both a specific, standardized methodology 
for assignment and maintenance, and a governance process that creates and 
encourages community adoption and reliance.  I'm on a couple of ISO TC68/SC4 
Working Groups (WG1 and WG8) that deal with standards for financial instruments 
and business entities, respectively.  I've also been around in this industry 
longer than I want to admit, and have been something of a data modeling geek 
for the majority of that time.  I've got quite a few scars from dealing with 
mixed up or inaccurate data due to identifier issues.      (018)

Imagine my surprise when a friend introduced me to the gentleman responsible 
for the DOI (www.doi.org) used in the publishing industry.  This is a 
combination of technology and governance that is used, among other things, in 
digital rights management for songs distributed over the internet.  Imagine my 
further surprise when I spent some time digging into it and looking at how it 
worked, talking with people trading derivatives and other industry 
participants, and finally realized that the logical problems involved in 
tracking the financial relationships among investment firms that result from 
the trading of complex instruments -- these problems are very, very similar to 
deciding what piece of hardware someone can use to play a song they've 
purchased over the internet on.  And, of course, who gets paid what.    (019)

I've been talking about this with others in the industry for about a year now, 
and it seems that some other folks are starting to come to the same conclusion. 
 (That obviously doesn't help with issues of entrenched commercial interests, 
etc., but it's a start.)    (020)

In line with Sira's note below, the important point here (and I apologize for 
the length this is growing to) is that in order to understand the similarities 
in the approaches, I had to essentially build a mental (and later an actual 
paper) ontology related to the actors, roles, and processes before I could 
understand the way in which the DOI (or a very similar approach) may be 
specifically applicable within financial services.      (021)

A methodology for comparing logical relationship arrangements among disparate 
ontologies would, in my opinion, yield immense benefits.  More importantly, 
establishing a communal practice of learning from each other across industry 
and expertise boundaries **and being able to demonstrate how this is done 
(graphical tools, etc.)** will demonstrate, in a concrete manner, the value of 
creating ontologies for specific areas.  Enabling machine reasoning along these 
lines will take "data mining" to an entirely new level.    (022)

With regards to (2), above, this is what Mike and I were talking about in 
reference to tools, and where we're going with our FISD Data Model Working 
Group.  I'll be happy to discuss this at length with anyone interested, but 
have gone on too long as it is.      (023)

Best,    (024)

BN    (025)

Bill Nichols
Program Director
Securities Processing Automation
FISD/SIIA
202.789.4480 - o
301.873.2812 - c     (026)

www.fisd.net
www.mddl.org
wiki.fisd.net    (027)



-----Original Message-----
From: ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Sirarat 
Sarntivijai
Sent: Wednesday, April 08, 2009 7:39 PM
To: Ontology Summit 2009
Subject: Re: [ontology-summit] Slight amendment to Gerry's request,plus a 
synopsis request    (028)

Dear Joab et al.,    (029)

The piece is a great summarized story of the meeting. In addition to that, I 
would like to raise some awareness of collaboration for interoperability and 
reusability here.    (030)

At the meeting, Dr. Ravi Sharma stressed on the importance of "integration" a 
few times (perhaps, this should be quite an important remark to add to the 
write-up). And I cannot say enough of how much I agree with him. I think the 
underlying statement of this idea is, although the ontology creation is 
important to answer the question of
*what* should be built using ontology technology, the challenges do not lie in 
how it is built, but rather how it is going to be used.    (031)

At this moment, people seek the immediate answer to building the industrial 
ontology in need for the common annotations/understanding of the data while 
wanting to promote the *interoperability* and *reusability*. Therefore, 
ontologists should keep in mind that even though the ontology that s/he creates 
will be defined to fit his/her use, it would be of a greater benefit to think 
of how it is going to be reused and interoperated as well.    (032)

The title of the write-up saying "Data reuse not possible without some 
ontological work" is only partially accurate, if I may say. Even with some 
ontological work in place, if the community is not thinking ahead of how this 
work is going to be used with other ontological work, reusability and 
interoperability can be and will be very challenging. Because ontology, in many 
cases, is built in a bottom-up manner where the creator of that ontology may or 
may not be aware of the ontology's power of computations for its reasoning 
sense. We have talked about eight different ontologies at the meeting. The 
primary use for each ontology seems to be well-defined within the individual 
scope of that ontology (I only heard two examples in the Unit Ontology and the 
Geospatial Ontology that would exercise this logical reasoning ability). 
However, I do urge the community to start thinking about how these ontologies 
are interrelated.    (033)

For example, i can very well imagine the building ontology (ref:  
MacPherson) reusing the geographical elements from the geospatial ontology 
(ref: Lieberman) project. Another example would be the gas&oil industry 
ontology (ref: West) collaborating the banking/ financial elements into its 
structure using the financial ontology
(ref: Nichols/Bennett), and the list goes on.    (034)

It is not only the interactions within the industrial ontologies that should be 
promoted, the interrelations with other seem-not-too- related worlds are 
definitely there. In health care and biomedical research, at many times what 
goes on with the treatment of one patient is tracked by the device being 
connected to the patient, and those devices can be defined by their physical 
locations. Having building ontology defined in place with a reusable 
definitions can certainly help improve the patient treatment tracking systems.    (035)

At a larger scope, I also urge that the organization at a higher level sees to 
the importance of this kind of collaboration. There seems to be a disconnection 
between organizations that can block the knowledge transfer among us. What we 
have learnt in biomedical ontology at the NIH side from so many years of trial 
and error can provide great insights to what is to do and what is not to do at 
NIST- industrial ontology so we do not repeat the same mistakes elsewhere which 
can cost us unnecessary time and money.    (036)

I can go on and on about this and it will only get more detailed, I should stop 
here but I will be more than happy to discuss this offline.    (037)

Thank you for reading until this very line :) Sira    (038)



Sirarat Sarntivijai
Ph.D. Candidate, Bioinformatics
Graduate Student Research Assistant, Center for Computational Medicine & 
Bioinformatics National Center for Integrative Biomedical Informatics 
University of Michigan    (039)

siiraa@xxxxxxxxx
http://www.ccmb.med.umich.edu/
http://www.ncibi.org/    (040)



On Apr 8, 2009, at 3:44 PM, Mike Bennett wrote:    (041)

> Hi Joab,
>
> Good write-up. There is a possible typo at the foot of Page 2:
>
> "And it would also reduce the number of elicit assumptions made by 
> scientists that can often lead to error"
>
> Do you mean explicit or illicit? Or implicit?
>
> I didn't see anything about the financial industry work, although you 
> mention it in the initial summary.
>
> Best regards,
>
>
> Mike Bennett
>
>
> Joab Jackson wrote:
>>
>> Hello!
>>
>> Joab Jackson here from Government Computer News... I've written up a 
>> quick summary of the communiqué and the meeting. We posted it
>> yesterday:
>>
>> http://gcn.com/articles/2009/04/07/nist-ontology.aspx
>>
>> I've tried to capture the details as accurately as possible, but if I 
>> made any mistakes, please shoot me an email and we'll get them 
>> corrected.
>>
>> I know the new administration is talking quite a bit about government 
>> reuse of data, so this topic is quite pertinent these days.
>>
>> Thanks again for letting me attend...
>>
>> Joab
>>
>> -----------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Joab Jackson
>>
>> Senior Editor, Technology
>>
>> Government Computer News
>>
>> 3141 Fairview Park Drive, Suite 777
>>
>> Falls Church, Va. 22042
>>
>> 1-(301)-576-9645
>>
>> http://www.gcn.com
>>
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> ---
>>
>> *From:* ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> [mailto:ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] *On Behalf Of 
>> *Steve Ray
>> *Sent:* Tuesday, April 07, 2009 10:34 AM
>> *To:* Ontology Summit 2009
>> *Subject:* Re: [ontology-summit] Slight amendment to Gerry's 
>> request,plus a synopsis request
>>
>> Great. Thanks, Josh.
>>
>> - Steve
>>
>> On Tue, Apr 7, 2009 at 6:51 AM, Lieberman Joshua 
>> <jlieberman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> <mailto:jlieberman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
>>
>> Here is an entry for OGC:
>>
>> Text:
>>
>> The proposed OGC project would leverage a standards ontologies 
>> registry-repository to create and manage mappings between 
>> discovery-level models for geospatial information and earth 
>> observation resources. Some of these ontologies have been created 
>> informally, some have not yet been created for relevant standards.
>> The
>> two use cases would involve first the creation / discovery / 
>> management / annotation of ontology artifacts (schema and domain 
>> level), and then their data-level use in federated catalogs / 
>> knowledgebases for cross-community queries and broad "findability".
>> There is both a general knowledge aspect, and aspects specific to 
>> geospatiotemporal observational parameters (feature of interest, 
>> phenomenon, measurand, sensor process model, etc.)
>>
>> Josh Lieberman
>>
>> On Apr 6, 2009, at 9:42 PM, Steve Ray wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> In this email is a link to an excel spreadsheet that will make it 
>> easier for us to assemble your responses. Please use this excel 
>> spreadsheet, then email your filled in spreadsheet to Peter Yim, 
>> Steve Ray and Michael Gruninger. (Our emails are on this message). We 
>> will then combine the results into one.
>>
>> Here's the spreadsheet link:
>> http://ontolog.cim3.net/file/work/OntologySummit2009/
>> OntologySummit2009_Symposium_20090406-07/wip/
>> OntologySummit2009_F2F-Day-1_Project-Survey-Template_20090406b.xls
>>
>> But before you go - we also need a textual synopsis of each of the 
>> nine projects, for inclusion in the communique. Could the appropriate 
>> champion please send that just to Steve Ray, who is compiling that.
>>
>> See you all tomorrow!
>>
>> --
>>
>> Steven Ray
>> Phone: (202) 362-5059
>> Cell: (202) 316-6481
>> Email: steve@xxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxxxx>
>>
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>> --
>>
>> Steven Ray
>> Phone: (202) 362-5059
>> Cell: (202) 316-6481
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>>
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>
>>
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>
>
> -- 
> Mike Bennett
> Director
> Hypercube Ltd.
> 89 Worship Street
> London EC2A 2BF
> Tel: +44 (0) 20 7917 9522
> Mob: +44 (0) 7721 420 730
> www.hypercube.co.uk
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>
>
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>
>    (042)


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