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Re: [ontology-summit] Track on Cyc?

To: Ontology Summit 2012 discussion <ontology-summit@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
From: "Steve Ray (CMU)" <steve.ray@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 30 Jan 2012 17:47:05 -0700
Message-id: <285A934A-FF28-45DC-A0C1-6232131AEBC9@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Amanda,
I couldn't agree more with your very articulate description of how track 4 fits in. I will do my best to convey those views with our prospective speakers.

 
- Steve

On Jan 28, 2012, at 6:48 PM, Amanda Vizedom <amanda.vizedom@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Barry,

I assume that Steve and Trish will be following the spirit and description of Track 4 and asking all invitees to talk about *use cases*, including interesting features and lessons learned (including whatever evaluations of performance and value may have been performed). I've no doubt that promotional or sales-like presentations will be discouraged equally of anyone participating.  

That said, I doubt that *any* use case owner is going to be willing to share their case or lessons openly if they feel that the summit will be used as a trial venue for them, their system, their methods and such overall.  And even if they were willing, such a treatment would be just as off-topic as its promotional opposite.

All,

I share Matthew's concerns about focus, and I don't think we're going to get there by defining focus in the abstract.  I think we will be best able to make progress by having some of this general discussion, then looking at particular use cases to sharpen our focus. From there some foci should emerge that are close enough to where real work is being done to point the continuing discussion toward areas in which the results of this community's exchange of idea can be of real use.

If this approach is right, it's important that we have a good set of use cases *and treat them as use cases*.  That is, we want to analyze and learn from them, collaboratively. We will lose that opportunity if we treat them either as promotional sessions or adversarial encounters. I trust our Track 4 co-champions to focus on bringing in presenters who have the knowledge and attitude to provide their use cases for collective analysis and discussion (and who very probably see that   setting the community thinking about issues they encountered has high potential value for their own, and the field's, understanding). To encourage such participation and to get the most out of it, we need to stay focused on the professional, technical collaboration, not on individual or product promotion or denigration, as well. 

Best,
Amanda

On Sat, Jan 28, 2012 at 20:11, Barry Smith <phismith@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Any speaker should be asked to provide empirical evidence to the effect that Cyc did indeed bring benefits to any real system
BS


On Sun, Jan 29, 2012 at 2:01 AM, Steve Ray (CMU) <steve.ray@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Speaking for Track 4, I'll add the possibility of a talk about the application of cyc to a real industrial system.

Suggestions of a speaker (and email introduction) for that particular angle would be much appreciated.

 
- Steve

On Jan 27, 2012, at 1:34 PM, Amanda Vizedom <amanda.vizedom@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Larry Lefkowitz was on the call and chat for the first two sessions, and especially active in chat for Session 2. I don't think anyone from Cycorp attended Session 3.  

I agree with Peter that it seems too much, too late -- and not necessarily on topic -- to spend a whole track, or even a whole session, given the limited number, on Cyc.  However, I'd like to suggest that it might be good to include a Cyc-based use case in Track 4.

As I see it, there are two very different types of use case to consider, here. 

The first is along the lines that Mike suggested: Look at an example of the incorporation of Cyc into a larger system, e.g. the Cleveland Clinic case.  I am sure there are many useful challenges, solutions, issues and lessons to be drawn from there.

The second involves looking at Cyc as a use case itself.  It's often the case that when people say "Cyc" they mean the ontology, or the knowledge base, but of course Cyc is itself a system, and quite a complex one at that.  It can be extendend, incorporated, taken partially, and/or connected to other components to form other systems with "Cyc Inside." And that's generally where the value is going to be. Nevertheless, it is quite a complex system on its own. There is "the ontology," (really, as Doug F. indicated, a complex system of ontologies, managed and related via the Microtheory construct). There is also the language, CycL, itself, and its implementation. There is the inference engine, with its own complexity of theorem prover, heuristic modules, and implemented strategies for choosing what to pursue when. There are a variety of interfaces. The ontology is constantly evolving, and there are components and subsystems dealing with truth maintenance, bookkeeping and provenance, traceability, testing, etc. 

Many of these subsystems were well-established, any many continuing to be developed, when I started working on Cyc at 1998. One thing I am often struck by is that many of the issues that appear as new or emergent in semantic technologies now were already being addressed in thoughtful and sophisticated ways in the Cyc system then. Cyc still has challenges, of course, but there is much to learn from the many person years of experience, and multiple rounds of implementation, learning, and revision, done on many of these fronts.  

There are also some technical folks at Cycorp with enough Systems Engineering background that they might be especially able to contribute to the summit topic. I recall the Robert Kahlert was always especially interested in what Systems Engineering methods and Ontology might, or ought to, have to contribute to one another. 

Either way (that is, an application of Cyc or Cyc as a System), I think a Cyc-based use case would be good to include in Track 4. Two cents for the Track 4 champions to consider.

Amanda




On Fri, Jan 27, 2012 at 14:43, Obrst, Leo J. <lobrst@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Actually, I think some of the Cyc folks are participating in this Summit.

Thanks,
Leo

-----Original Message-----
From: ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ontology-summit-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mike Bennett
Sent: Friday, January 27, 2012 8:48 AM
To: Ontology Summit 2012 discussion
Subject: Re: [ontology-summit] Track on Cyc?

That would be good. It would also be valuable to unpack the
stated disconnect between the ontology and IT in terms of
ontology quality / QA related issues.

Dealing with the connection or otherwise between ontologies and
IT is something I think is relevant to a lot of people. All too
often the push towards the use of semantic technologies becomes a
push to do everything as triple stores and semantic queries,
without considering the use of ontologies within conventional
technology environments, I think.

Mike

On 27/01/2012 05:00, John F. Sowa wrote:
> In reviewing the discussions about Big Systems, I noticed that the
> world's biggest formal ontology, which has been used in conjunction
> with very large commercial applications hasn't been discussed.
>
> That is Cyc.  It was founded in 1984 as part of MCC and spun off
> as an independent company, CycCorp, in 1994.  They had 28 years
> of continuous development.  After the first 25 years, they had
> devoted 1000 person years (a full person millennium!) to the
> development.  They also have a long list of publications that
> are available for download:  http://cyc.com/cyc/technology/pubs
>
> If we really want to know what a large ontology system can do and
> how it can be used in conjunction with mainstream IT, I suggest
> that we devote an entire track of the Ontology Summit to Cyc.
>
> Among the many participants in Ontolog Forum, Doug Foxvog and
> Amanda Vizedom were employed at Cyc.  They could present talks
> about their experience at Cyc, what lessons they learned from it,
> and how their work at Cyc compares to projects that they have
> worked on since them.
>
> I would expect them to give a balanced treatment of the strengths
> and weaknesses of Cyc.  Many of us have had many criticisms
> about various aspects of Cyc, but any AI company that can
> stay in business for 28 years is a major achievement.  We
> should try to learn as much as we can from their experience.
>
> Another person who used Cyc extensively back in the 1990s is
> Bill Anderson.  He and his group worked on DoD projects that used
> Cyc to develop ontologies and applications.  As a result of that
> experience, they started their own company, Ontology Works,
> which has more recently been renamed High Fleet.
>
> I would like to hear a talk by Bill about his experiences with
> Cyc and how that led him and his colleagues to found their
> own company.  It would be very interesting to hear a comparison
> of the applications and methodologies used with Cyc and the
> experience they have had at Ontology Works and High Fleet.
>
> I would expect these talks to cover both positive and negative
> aspects of Cyc.  But it would also be good to invite somebody
> who is currently working at Cyc to present their views.  As
> an example, one of the biggest applications of Cyc is at
> the Cleveland Clinic:
>
> http://www.cyc.com/technology/whitepapers_dir/Harnessing_Cyc_to_Answer_Clincal_Researchers_ad_hoc_Queries.pdf
>
> I also spoke briefly to somebody from the Cleveland Clinic, who
> said that there was a large "disconnect" between the methods
> used for Cyc and the mainstream IT methods that their programmers
> were familiar with.  That is a very serious issue that has
> plagued many AI projects, and I'd like to hear about the issues
> from both ends:  the Cyc personnel and some knowledgeable IT
> developer at the Cleveland Clinic.
>
> This is the kind of track that would be highly informative
> for people with a background in either or both mainstream IT
> and AI technology.  And it's hard to find any ontology project
> that is bigger than Cyc.
>
> John
>
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Mike Bennett
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