To: | Ontology Summit 2011 discussion <ontology-summit@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
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From: | Ali Hashemi <ali.hashemi@xxxxxxxxxxx> |
Date: | Thu, 16 Dec 2010 11:27:31 -0500 |
Message-id: | <AANLkTi=BnXjJHz8UD6sWKr2K1QU38B+5AGsp7pBNKH30@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
Dear All, I unfortunately won't be able to make the call today, but I have some suggestions sparked by the responses from Todd, Deborah, Steve W. and others, Before we dive into details of how to make specific cases, I suggest it would be beneficial to take a finer stock of the problem space.
As Todd notes here, On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 9:44 AM, Todd J Schneider <todd.schneider@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
It is important to identify who the potential audiences are. The case for an ontology needs to be made and is different for a CEO, CTO, engineer, programmer and whoever else requires convincing in an organization or culture.
The approaches noted by Todd, Deborah and Steve W. presume a particular use / technical component of an ontology (OWL, databases or...). [TS] There are multiple ways to answer each of these variants, but it would be more effective if all the possible answers used a common theme (i.e., the sales pitch). As evidenced by the current uses of 'ontologies', the aspect of data models seems optimal as the entree for starting an engagement with sceptics. Before we do that, it is important as well to identify the different uses of formal ontologies in organizations. This certainly extends beyond using ontologies in database environments. Indeed, in one of the decks Bradley shared here:
Slide 6 identifies some application types for an ontological approach in an organization. Not all of these are suited for OWL or require mentions of the RDMS world. To the projects identified there, one could add several more to do with software development, model verification, systems to retain the knowledge of employees who are retiring and more that I'm sure others on this list can contribute.
Moreover, each of these projects might have parts of a case which are common to others, but some which are different. For example, an ontology that must be "reasoned on" or accessed in real time, vs one that is used for off-line verification or even to guide the design of some system will have very different cases to be made.
Building on what Steve and Nicola started with the domain identification here: Before we skipping into the details of particular projects, or perhaps alongside the development of technology specific cases, we would benefit from collecting and then synthesizing the different responses people give to:
1. Who is the audience?
CEO, CTO, Project Manager, SysAdmin, IT Manager, Programmers, etc. Note: a CEO, CTO, VP of X, or Project Manager might hold the purse strings and/or a yes/no veto for a project started; while the implementers, other stakeholders and programmers are the culture. At the very least, two very different cases need to be made here for a successful ontology project: cultural / technical vs business / technical.
2. How can one use an ontology in an organization / culture? (Bradley, I hope you don't mind that I've reproduced your bullets here):
3. Are there any major themes or patterns through the above answers?
I seeded answers to these questions with a high-level synthesis of the previous discussions, but please feel free to adjust. I didn't add this to the wiki because I'm not sure where it should go, if at all - again, feel free to add to the appropriate wiki page+section if useful.
Best, Ali -- _________________________________________________________________ Msg Archives: http://ontolog.cim3.net/forum/ontology-summit/ Subscribe/Config: http://ontolog.cim3.net/mailman/listinfo/ontology-summit/ Unsubscribe: mailto:ontology-summit-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Community Files: http://ontolog.cim3.net/file/work/OntologySummit2011/ Community Wiki: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?OntologySummit2011 Community Portal: http://ontolog.cim3.net/wiki/ (01) |
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