Thanks Joel,
Pete,
Thanks - I corrected the geo properties.
Joel.
On Wed, 12 Jan 2011, Peter DeVries wrote:
Hi Joel,<http://lsd.taxonconcept.org/describe/?url=http://spire.umbc.edu/ethan/Ampelopsis_brevipedunculata>
Cool :-)
I just loaded this into my SPARQL endpoint.
In the named graph urn:org:linkedopenspeciesdata:dataspace:tdwg2010bioblitz
It consists of 19,990 Triples
Here is one of the dwc:taxonConceptID entries.
*About: http://spire.umbc.edu/ethan/Ampelopsis_brevipedunculata*
http://lsd.taxonconcept.org/describe/?url=http://spire.umbc.edu/ethan/Ampelopsis_brevipedunculata
*About: http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1627*
http://lsd.taxonconcept.org/describe/?url=http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1627TaxonConcept Knowledge Base <http://www.taxonconcept.org/> / GeoSpecies
<http://lsd.taxonconcept.org/describe/?url=http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1627>This
should give you an a count of occurrences.
SELECT count(*) WHERE {?s a <http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/#Occurrence>};
= 1882
SELECT count(*) WHERE {?s a <http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/#taxonConceptID>};
This should give you a list of occurrences
http://lsd.taxonconcept.org/describe/?url=http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/%23Occurrence
If this did not come through your email system try the bit.ly.
http://bit.ly/g9BcoL
I tried the following that should have given me a google map of all the
occurrences but it did not result in the map.
DESCRIBE ?x WHERE {
?x <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <
http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/#Occurrence>.
}
I looked that the RDF and I think I see the problem.
In the RDF
<geo:latitude>
41.53
</geo:latitude>
<geo:longitude>
-70.67
</geo:longitude>
Should be
<geo:lat>
41.53
</geo:lat>
<geo:long>
-70.67
</geo:long>
See http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/
I did the following query to get a list of all the dwc:taxonConceptID's and
have attached them as a .txt file.
select distinct ?o WHERE {?s <http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/#taxonConceptID>
?o}
Pretty neat :-)
There are some things that I will get back to Joel on.
Here is where you can manually enter a SPARQL query. Click on "Advanced" for
the entry window.
http://lsd.taxonconcept.org/isparql/
Respectfully,
- Pete
On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 5:55 PM, joel sachs <jsachs@csee.umbc.edu> wrote:
Hi Everyone,
I've posted rdf of the bioblitz data. It's at
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/TechnoBioblitzOccurrences.rdf .
Individual occurrences can be retrieved via
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/[occurrence_id]
e.g. http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1835
Individual identifications can be retrieved via
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/identifications/[identification_id]
e.g.
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/identifications/tdwg2010bioblitz_1835_id_1
The scripts behind this are on the kludgy side, so reports of errors and
abnormalities will be warmly welcomed.
Implicit in each of the following notes is the question "Is this a good
way to do it?":
1. The data is "normalized" w.r.t. identification. "Normalized" is in
quotes because I mean it in the sense that Steve Baskauf was using in his
Fall 2010 series of posts. His meaning of the term makes sense to me, but
many people (e.g. the OBO folks), take "normalized ontology" to mean
"disentangled" (i.e. no multiple inheritance.)
As an example, here's an occurrence with two crowdsourced determinations:
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1644
2. I used sequential integers for observation and identification IDs; in
practice, a mechanism needs to be in place to prevent two people from
assigning the same id to their respective identifications.
3. My answer to Cam Webb's Question #1 from
http://lists.tdwg.org/pipermail/tdwg-content/2010-October/001720.html
is "both". In other words, just as "Joel Sachs" is both me and also my
name, so
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1668 is both
an occurrence and an occurrence_id, expressed as:
---
<dwc:Occurrence
rdf:about="
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1644">
<dwc:occurrenceID>
http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/tdwg2010bioblitz_1644
</dwc:occurrenceID>
<blah blah blah/>
</dwc:Occurrence>
---
4. I was surprised to see that the Darwin Core Identification class has no
"occurrenceID" or "specimenID" term. How is one supposed to tie an
identification to an observation (assuming the identification is not
in-lined, of course)? DeVries and Baskauf each mint their own terms for
doing this (txn:identificationHasOccurrence, and sernec:basedOnOccurrence,
respectively); I used dwc:occurrenceID as if it were a record level term.
5. We had scope for multiple taxonConceptID columns in the Fusion table,
and assigned lsids where possible. I also mean to work with Pete to assign
GUIDs from taxoncocept.org. In addition, I assigned ethan taxon concept
ids, which look like this:
http:.//spire.umbc.edu/ethan/Coffea_arabica
In their argument over opaque vs. transparent taxonCoceptIDs, I was
sympathetic to both Pete's and Gregor's arguments. Ultimately, if the
tooling exists to always display the rdfs:labels every time I'm loooking
at a list of opaqueIDs, then transparent IDs are unnecessary. But, for
now, it's really helpful to look at an ID and know what it's referring to.
(For species names not in the spire database, the rdf returned by
http:.//spire.umbc.edu/ethan/$name
is simply an rdfs:seeAlso to
http://http://gni.globalnames.org/name_strings?search_term=$name)
6. It was easy to assert membership in RDF classes corresponding to
various Cape Cod categories of concern - invasive species, threatenened
species, indicators, etc. You can see these classes at
http://spire.umbc.edu/ontologies/lists (Information of where these lists
come from is included as rdfs:comments. I'll add further documentation,
e.g. links to eml files.)
Note that "ThingOfConcern" is defined as the superclass of all the other
classes in the collection. The idea here is that people can create their
own "ThingOfConcern" class, and then query for observations that are of
concern to them. You can see sample sparql queries at
http://www.csee.umbc.edu/~jsachs/occurrences/queries/sample.txt
As an aside, I think we, as a community, should come up with a
biodiversity benchmark suite of rdf data and corresponding sparql queries,
that can be
used to test the suitability and scalability of semantic web knowledge
bases. I'll take this up in a future post (unless someone beats me to it).
Comments, questions, and better ideas are welcome.
Thanks -
Joel.
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--
---------------------------------------------------------------
Pete DeVries
Department of Entomology
University of Wisconsin - Madison
445 Russell Laboratories
1630 Linden Drive
Madison, WI 53706
Knowledge Base <http://lod.geospecies.org/>
About the GeoSpecies Knowledge Base <http://about.geospecies.org/>
------------------------------------------------------------