From asimpson at usgs.gov Thu Dec 6 19:53:15 2018 From: asimpson at usgs.gov (Simpson, Annie) Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2018 14:53:15 -0500 Subject: [tdwg-content] I am seeking speakers for a proposed Biodiversity Next symposium Message-ID: Hello, TDWG list members, I've submitted the following abstract to Biodiversity Next and would like to know if any of you would like to give a talk? I've requested a 90-minute slot. If you are interested, please email me with your name, affiliation, title, and 300 word (or less) abstract, and we will see where this goes. How can specialized databases integrate information and work better together? Is following Darwin Core enough? Invasive species databases and other specialized biodiversity information systems are being called more and more to share their information with one another (Zeller et al. 2005; Holdren 2013). Because of differences in data content and database purpose, much information from smaller datasets can be lost during the integration process into larger databases such as BISON, iDigBio, GBIF, and others (Costello et al. 2013). The effort required for cross-walking data fields and for modifying database structure to accommodate new information is significant (Diepenbroek et al. 2014). Darwin Core extensions have been, and continue to be, created to facilitate the sharing of specialized datasets (Byrd 2018). However, following the guidelines set out in these extensions can be insufficient when their structure leans toward the flexible vs. requiring the use of controlled terms. Participants in this symposium will be encouraged to share examples -- both challenges and successes -- they have encountered during their efforts to combine specialized datasets. - Byrd C (2018) Adaptation of Darwin Core Standards and Development of New Standards for Geologic Specimens. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 2: e25929. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.2.25929 - Costello MJ, Michener MK, Gahegan M, Zhang ZQ, Bourne PE (2013) Biodiversity data should be published, cited, and peer reviewed. Trends in Ecology & Evolution. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2013.05.002 - Diepenbroek M, Gl?ckner FO, Grobe P, G?ntsch A, Huber R, K?nig-Ries B, Kostadinov I, Nieschulze J, Seeger B, Tolksdorf R, Triebel D, (2014) Towards an integrated biodiversity and ecological research data management and archiving platform: the German federation for the curation of biological data (GFBio). In: Pl?dereder E, Grunske L, Schneider E, Ull, D (Eds.), Informatik 2014. Bonn: Gesellschaft f?r Informatik e.V. p1711-1721. https://dl.gi.de/handle/20.500.12116/2782 - Holdren JP (2013) Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research. Office of Science and Technology Policy Memorandum, United States Government, Washington, DC. https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/ostp_public_access_memo_2013.pdf - Zeller D, Froese R, and Paulya D (2005) On losing and recovering fisheries and marine science data. Marine Policy 29(1):69-73. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0308597X04000193 *Annie Simpson, biologist & information scientist* asimpson at usgs.gov +1 703 648 4281 desk http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8338-5134 *BISON project (http://bison.usgs.gov )* EcoScience Synthesis Branch *Science Analytics and Synthesis Program* *U.S. Geological Survey, MS 30212201 Sunrise Valley DriveReston, Virginia 20192* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From K.Mortimer at dal.ca Wed Dec 12 19:34:09 2018 From: K.Mortimer at dal.ca (Kim Mortimer) Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 19:34:09 +0000 Subject: [tdwg-content] Darwin Core and dcterms:location Message-ID: To the TDWG mailing list and whomever it may concern, Darwin Core uses a Dublin Core element, dcterms:location, in its definition of classes and elements. However, no current XSD files for Dublin Core (that I can find) define location as an element. For reference, the current Dublin Core XSD files that I am familiar with are available at http://dublincore.org/schemas/xmls/qdc/ Given that dcterms:location is therefore an undefined element, the Darwin Core XML is invalid. This is important to me, and my employer MERIDIAN, because we are implementing Darwin Core in a GeoNetwork metadata schema plugin for our repository. To allow other documents to be validated against our schema within GeoNetwork, the entire plugin XML (which for us includes the Darwin Core XML) must be valid. I previously sent an email about this in September but did not receive any useful advice at the time. Development on our metadata repository has progressed without this element since then, as we have been tracking down other errors in GeoNetwork, but this is the current 'blocking' problem for us. The Darwin Core XSD files reference a dublin_core.xsd in their comments, which is said to contain dcterms:location. My best guess at what this refers to is https://github.com/tdwg/dwc/blob/2011-10-26/xsd/dublin_core.xsd - which is from a previous version of Darwin Core, and appears to be a custom version of http://dublincore.org/schemas/xmls/qdc/2008/02/11/dcterms.xsd - so it unclear whether this is correct or not. Given that TDWG is responsible for Darwin Core, I am hopeful that someone will have a tip or solution. My alternative is to define dcterms:location myself as a custom insertion into Dublin Core, but based on the comments in Darwin Core files I believe some suitable XSD must exist. Thank you very much for your time, Kim Mortimer [MERIDIAN on blue circle containing many numbers, with an orange wave pulse to the right.] Kim Mortimer Data Manager MERIDIAN - Marine Environmental Research Infrastructure for Data Integration and Application Network Institute for Big Data Analytics, Faculty of Computer Sciences, Dalhousie University p: + 1 902 494 1812 m: +1 902 880 1863 a: 6050 University Ave, Halifax, NS, B3H 4R2, Canada w: https://meridian.cs.dal.ca e: k.mortimer at dal.ca -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From trobertson at gbif.org Wed Dec 12 20:05:56 2018 From: trobertson at gbif.org (Tim Robertson) Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 20:05:56 +0000 Subject: [tdwg-content] Darwin Core and dcterms:location Message-ID: <8318D02A-7367-491F-A3A0-E4FCF22A0077@gbif.org> Hi Kim, (moving our private discussion onto this list) Thanks for the links. As far as I can see the ?custom? dublin_core.xsd existed in all DwC releases from 2009 up until 2013-10-23 where it was removed. In that removal, the references to the location were also commented out (I presume meaning the modified XSD was no longer needed) though. For you to still find references to it suggests you might be using an older version of the Darwin Core XSD ? is that possible? John / Peter: Do you recall why it was removed? To save searching, the modification to the DC xsd appeared to contain only the following: The commented out reference in the DwC xsd: (see https://dwc.tdwg.org/xml/tdwg_dwc_class_terms.xsd) From: tdwg-content on behalf of Kim Mortimer Date: Wednesday, 12 December 2018 at 20.34 To: "tdwg-content at lists.tdwg.org" Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] Darwin Core and dcterms:location To the TDWG mailing list and whomever it may concern, Darwin Core uses a Dublin Core element, dcterms:location, in its definition of classes and elements. However, no current XSD files for Dublin Core (that I can find) define location as an element. For reference, the current Dublin Core XSD files that I am familiar with are available at http://dublincore.org/schemas/xmls/qdc/ Given that dcterms:location is therefore an undefined element, the Darwin Core XML is invalid. This is important to me, and my employer MERIDIAN, because we are implementing Darwin Core in a GeoNetwork metadata schema plugin for our repository. To allow other documents to be validated against our schema within GeoNetwork, the entire plugin XML (which for us includes the Darwin Core XML) must be valid. I previously sent an email about this in September but did not receive any useful advice at the time. Development on our metadata repository has progressed without this element since then, as we have been tracking down other errors in GeoNetwork, but this is the current 'blocking' problem for us. The Darwin Core XSD files reference a dublin_core.xsd in their comments, which is said to contain dcterms:location. My best guess at what this refers to is https://github.com/tdwg/dwc/blob/2011-10-26/xsd/dublin_core.xsd - which is from a previous version of Darwin Core, and appears to be a custom version of http://dublincore.org/schemas/xmls/qdc/2008/02/11/dcterms.xsd - so it unclear whether this is correct or not. Given that TDWG is responsible for Darwin Core, I am hopeful that someone will have a tip or solution. My alternative is to define dcterms:location myself as a custom insertion into Dublin Core, but based on the comments in Darwin Core files I believe some suitable XSD must exist. Thank you very much for your time, Kim Mortimer [mage removed by sender. MERIDIAN on blue circle containing many numbers,] Kim Mortimer Data Manager MERIDIAN - Marine Environmental Research Infrastructure for Data Integration and Application Network Institute for Big Data Analytics, Faculty of Computer Sciences, Dalhousie University p: + 1 902 494 1812 m: +1 902 880 1863 a: 6050 University Ave, Halifax, NS, B3H 4R2, Canada w: https://meridian.cs.dal.ca e: k.mortimer at dal.ca -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From K.Mortimer at dal.ca Wed Dec 12 20:25:54 2018 From: K.Mortimer at dal.ca (Kim Mortimer) Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 20:25:54 +0000 Subject: [tdwg-content] Darwin Core and dcterms:location In-Reply-To: <8318D02A-7367-491F-A3A0-E4FCF22A0077@gbif.org> References: <8318D02A-7367-491F-A3A0-E4FCF22A0077@gbif.org> Message-ID: Hi Tim, I think I skipped a few steps in my previous explanations... - the explicit reference to dcterms:location is now coming from a custom addition to tdwg_dwc_classes.xsd. If this wasn't there, dcterms:location wouldn't be defined at all in the schema, thus making the samples shown in section 2.7.1 of https://dwc.tdwg.org/xml/ invalid. The goal was to make "location" mandatory in the Darwin Core description (among a few other classes). I added the following to the xs:sequence definition of the Darwin Record Set. All of these (including a commented out dcterms:location) are defined in tdwg_dwc_class_terms.xsd, and the dcterms:location comment says "see dublin_core.xsd for definition". As we have now both observed, dublin_core.xsd used to exist, but has now been removed... the commented out code would seem to define dcterms:location in the same structure as the other dwc classes from tdwg_dwc_class_terms.xsd, and seems to be exactly what I would need - except, if the Darwin Core XML guide is all valid, I would be making 'custom classes and terms' for my Darwin Core plugin, which breaks interoperability. Kim ________________________________ From: Tim Robertson Sent: 12 December 2018 16:05:56 To: Kim Mortimer; tdwg-content at lists.tdwg.org; John Wieczorek; Peter Desmet Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] Darwin Core and dcterms:location Hi Kim, (moving our private discussion onto this list) Thanks for the links. As far as I can see the ?custom? dublin_core.xsd existed in all DwC releases from 2009 up until 2013-10-23 where it was removed. In that removal, the references to the location were also commented out (I presume meaning the modified XSD was no longer needed) though. For you to still find references to it suggests you might be using an older version of the Darwin Core XSD ? is that possible? John / Peter: Do you recall why it was removed? To save searching, the modification to the DC xsd appeared to contain only the following: The commented out reference in the DwC xsd: (see https://dwc.tdwg.org/xml/tdwg_dwc_class_terms.xsd) From: tdwg-content on behalf of Kim Mortimer Date: Wednesday, 12 December 2018 at 20.34 To: "tdwg-content at lists.tdwg.org" Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] Darwin Core and dcterms:location To the TDWG mailing list and whomever it may concern, Darwin Core uses a Dublin Core element, dcterms:location, in its definition of classes and elements. However, no current XSD files for Dublin Core (that I can find) define location as an element. For reference, the current Dublin Core XSD files that I am familiar with are available at http://dublincore.org/schemas/xmls/qdc/ Given that dcterms:location is therefore an undefined element, the Darwin Core XML is invalid. This is important to me, and my employer MERIDIAN, because we are implementing Darwin Core in a GeoNetwork metadata schema plugin for our repository. To allow other documents to be validated against our schema within GeoNetwork, the entire plugin XML (which for us includes the Darwin Core XML) must be valid. I previously sent an email about this in September but did not receive any useful advice at the time. Development on our metadata repository has progressed without this element since then, as we have been tracking down other errors in GeoNetwork, but this is the current 'blocking' problem for us. The Darwin Core XSD files reference a dublin_core.xsd in their comments, which is said to contain dcterms:location. My best guess at what this refers to is https://github.com/tdwg/dwc/blob/2011-10-26/xsd/dublin_core.xsd - which is from a previous version of Darwin Core, and appears to be a custom version of http://dublincore.org/schemas/xmls/qdc/2008/02/11/dcterms.xsd - so it unclear whether this is correct or not. Given that TDWG is responsible for Darwin Core, I am hopeful that someone will have a tip or solution. My alternative is to define dcterms:location myself as a custom insertion into Dublin Core, but based on the comments in Darwin Core files I believe some suitable XSD must exist. Thank you very much for your time, Kim Mortimer [mage removed by sender. MERIDIAN on blue circle containing many numbers,] Kim Mortimer Data Manager MERIDIAN - Marine Environmental Research Infrastructure for Data Integration and Application Network Institute for Big Data Analytics, Faculty of Computer Sciences, Dalhousie University p: + 1 902 494 1812 m: +1 902 880 1863 a: 6050 University Ave, Halifax, NS, B3H 4R2, Canada w: https://meridian.cs.dal.ca e: k.mortimer at dal.ca -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Hilmar.Lapp at duke.edu Thu Dec 13 20:08:25 2018 From: Hilmar.Lapp at duke.edu (Hilmar Lapp) Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2018 20:08:25 +0000 Subject: [tdwg-content] Call for Registration - U.S. Semantic Technologies Symposium Series (us2ts 2019) In-Reply-To: <004201d4921c$f726c600$e5745200$@googlemail.com> References: <02cb01d455aa$188779c0$49966d40$@googlemail.com> <050801d48118$1a1bba50$4e532ef0$@googlemail.com> <004201d4921c$f726c600$e5745200$@googlemail.com> Message-ID: Apologies for cross-posting. ============================================================ U.S. Semantic Technologies Symposium Series US2TS Call for Registration http://us2ts.org/2019/posts/registration.html ============================================================ Registration -------------------------------------- Early Registration deadline: Jan 22, 2019. Registration link: http://us2ts.org/2019/posts/registration.html US2TS -------------------------------------- Semantic Web is an inherently multi-disciplinary field. With an ever-growing dependence on the Web and the continuously increasing importance of large-scale data sharing, integration, and reuse, natural science researchers, geoscience, biology, library science, health care, the humanities, just to name a few, have also taken an increasing interest in the Semantic Web. The U.S. Semantic Technologies Symposium (US2TS) series provide a forum to ease the division between computer science, natural science, and academia/government/industry. The list of program sessions is now available at http://us2ts.org/2019/posts/program.html Contact -------------------------------------- All questions about submissions should be emailed to contact-us2ts2019 at googlegroups.com Sponsors -------------------------------------- The following sponsors have expressed their financial support for US2TS 2019: National Science Foundation, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation , Artificial Intelligence Journal Platinum sponsors: Mobi, Raytheon BBN, data.world Standard sponsors: IOS Press [image.png] U.S. Semantic Technologies Symposium Series March 11-13, 2019 at Duke University in Durham, NC http://us2ts.org/2019/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 3740 bytes Desc: image.png URL: