It would certainly help if we could have the tools/services/content/UIs in place to allow people who people taxonomically identify occrence records to point-and-click among the options. However, we don't need to have that infrastructure in place to get started. Whenever I give advice to people setting up data-gathering protocols involving occurrence records (of any kind), is to always always always *always* record the field guide or taxonomic treatment that was use in establishing the identification. Even if the person is an expert in the group, and identified it from their brain, they should still include some sort of published treatment as a "sensu" reference. Eventually, these treatments will get plugged into the taxon concept "matrix", and the identification will have taxon-concept context.
The point is, we don't need to build the tools before people can start capturing the information.
Rich
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From: David Remsen (GBIF) [mailto:dremsen@gbif.org] Sent: Sunday, June 13, 2010 12:59 AM To: Peter DeVries Cc: David Remsen (GBIF); Richard Pyle; tdwg-content@lists.tdwg.org; Kevin Richards; Jerry Cooper; dmozzherin; David Patterson Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] Name is species concept thinking
Pete - you just summed up much of where I left off in my just-sent post. If we can present those curating occurrence records with a comprehensive set of relevant concept options, ideally tied to reference publications like field guides, etc., we can support the use of concept identifiers in those records. That provides the basis for having some idea of the process by which they determined what name to use.
DR
To Paddy et al. I don't know if we really know unless we have some idea of the process by which they determined what name to use.
- Pete
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 4:00 AM, Richard Pyle deepreef@bishopmuseum.org wrote:
What you're asking for would certainly be nice! But I was aiming more for what you described as "an improvement". Baby steps.... :-)
Seriously, though -- I agree taxonomists have failed to be sufficiently explicit in their writings over the centuries to provide the raw material for machine-generated reasoning and inferencing through the content of their documents. However, I'm not so sure they have failed to provide sufficient information to allow for (mostly) reliable and accurate human- (or at least taxonomist-) generated reasoning and inferencing. That's why I think a key aspect of all of this -- especially for legacy content -- is third-party assertions. I don't think it's true that "most" species descriptions result in persons 1&2 assinging a given specimen to two separate concepts. But certainly there are enough to represent a non-trivial problem.
Rich
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From: Peter DeVries [mailto:pete.devries@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, June 12, 2010 7:24 PM To: Richard Pyle Cc: David Remsen (GBIF); tdwg-content@lists.tdwg.org; Kevin Richards; Jerry Cooper; dmozzherin; David Patterson Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] Name is species concept thinking
I think that the problem is that most species descriptions are written a way that person1 interprets specimenA as conceptB and person2 interprets specimenA and ConceptC.
This needs to be made more scientific so that one can test what proportions of specimens actually conform to the description (concept).
These descriptions should be open, world readable and reference-able via a URI.
Respectfully,
- Pete
** There also seems to be mismatch between the concept the human identifier choose (often via a key) and the species description (concept) to which you are saying their data applies.
On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 7:50 PM, Richard Pyle deepreef@bishopmuseum.org wrote:
That said modeling relationships between taxonomic publications where the authors actually read the original species description, reviewed the type specimens, and thought about the actual species conscription is
appropriate.
This is the sort of things the Meta-Authorities would take into account when selecting a "follow-this-treatment" Usage-Instance for the preferred treatment of a name.
Also consider that a large proportion of specimens are misidentified, and it occurs to me that modeling things like species occurrences as if they are Puma concolor (Linnaeus, 1771) sensu stricto is probably not appropriate. At best they are something like (Felis concolor / Puma concolor) with some significant level of error.
GNA can't helpw ith that directly -- but it can help indirectly. Imagine a service that takes ever specimen in a given collection's database, and runs it against a mapping service as I described in the previous message. I can easily imagine a GIS-based algorithm that finds "outliers" -- that is occurrence records that appear to be outside the distribution based on the occurrence records from other sources. A clver/robust such algorithm could probably even discern whether the outlier likely represented a range extension (e.g. poorly-known species, plausible extansion), vs. a misidentification (e.g., well-known species and/or common misidentification).
This would lead to a set of flagged records from the collection that might be misidentified.
Rich
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