To: | Ontology Summit 2014 discussion <ontology-summit@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
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From: | Andrea Westerinen <arwesterinen@xxxxxxxxx> |
Date: | Tue, 28 Jan 2014 21:03:59 -0500 |
Message-id: | <CALThp9kfM6wiAX-4jLe=_KnnxCpd9GaPmjVt6PU6bwmBhTB0yQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
Matthew, My apologies for the delay in answering, but I was travelling and unable to respond.
My replies are inline ... Andrea On Sun, Jan 26, 2014 at 2:52 AM, Matthew West <dr.matthew.west@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
There are two different ways to answer this depending on your definition of a "module". When I think of a module, I think of a semantic concept, a definitional element, with a description of its design, uses and the context in which it was developed. It is by no means a complete/integrated data model.
Agree. To model a domain, process, etc. requires multiple semantics and therefore multiple modules.
Signs, names, ... seems like a valuable semantic concept/"module". 15-20 entity types seems like a large number, however. Given what I remember from neurological studies, visual recall is limited to 12-15 items and aural recall to 4. I would advocate smaller modules/groupings that in turn may reference other modules. The key to making this work, however, is tooling. (Something we don't have.)
But, other groups will need this "sign" concept as well, but for very different applications. And, they will want to combine the semantics and use the constructs in their complete/integrated data model. But, when the entities are in one, large, contiguous definition, it is difficult or impossible to pull the semantics apart.
This comes down to the issue being discussed in the other thread for Track A, about finding content for reuse. I did find valuable content for reuse in ISO 15926. It was just difficult to find.
I would view your subject areas as domain models built from modules. I tend to think that concepts like Person, Organization, Location, etc. are reusable modules. FIBO certainly has them. :-) I would have loved to have seen a basic Person ontology/model/pattern/archetype documented by ISO 15926 (since it came first in time), and then discussed and/extended by the FIBO team, instead of having an ISO 15926 person and a FIBO person.
My experience is that the number is much smaller than 200, unless you clump the abstractions or have tooling to help manage the concepts, hierarchy and relationships.
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