Dear Hilmar,
Thanks for your questions about DSW. Steve will have more to add, but the
simple answer is that DSW was not indented to say anything new about the
existing DwC classes themselves, other than offering a suggestion, based
on Steve's extensive search for community consensus on usage in the
tdwg-content list, of how the classes best relate to one another. These
relations are indicated by the coining of a set of predicates that offer
more semantic content than the generic dwc:relatedResourceID, and permit
more succinct SPARQL searches, as Bob pointed out.
Based on Steve's review, the range of ways of using the dwc:Occurrence
class has been wide, and we suggested a restricted usage in this ontology:
the documented presence of an individual organism at a particular event (=
space x time); a specimen/photo/observation is in this case not the
occurrence itself, but provides evidence for the occurrence.
This all depends on the one new class in DSW, the IndividualOrganism,
which Steve and others have been proposing as a fundamental class for
modeling biodiversity data. With an IndividualOrganism class, we can
easily link from the knowledge domain of biological specimens to that of
population biology, where observed/remeasured individuals are the core
unit.
We developed DSW to serve our pragmatic need for a semantic template with
which to serve data as RDF. Reasoning with it is possible, as you and Bob
noted, but I agree, the range of discoveries is limited, because of the
few logical restrictions currently in DSW. Perhaps we should not have used
the word `ontology' to describe it?
As is still the case now as when Steve announced DSW to tdwg-content, we
consider DSW primarily a suggestion for further discussion, and hopefully
for further community development (i.e. via the nascent TDWG RDF/OWL Task
Group). It `makes sense' to us, and we're using it to model data, but
would appreciate significant comment and criticism, including the need to
add more logical restrictions.
Best,
Cam
[ There's more on our rationale behind DSW at:
http://code.google.com/p/darwin-sw/wiki/Rationale ]
On Wed, 25 Jan 2012, Hilmar Lapp wrote:
Hi Steve and Cam,
I have a question re: your design of the current Semantic Darwin Core
ontology. (And this is assuming that with the published 0.2 version I
have the latest one in hand.)
My understanding is that all classes in DSW are imported from either DwC
or DC (or FOAF), in order to reuse those terms. While that's a good idea
in principle, it seems that DSW is actually not saying much new (in a
semantic sense) about them, except to declare them to be OWL classes,
and to assert them as disjoint from each other (or equivalent in one
case). DSW then adds a variety of object (and some data) properties,
which distinguish themselves from those in DwC by declaring domain and
range axioms for them. But that doesn't say anything about the classes
either, nor does it, I would argue, about the properties - domain and
range constraint really only say something about the instances for which
one asserts those properties.
So by itself the DSW won't allow me to infer anything about the classes
and properties in the ontology (aside from disjointness), though it will
allow me to make more inferences about instance data to which it is
applied than DwC would. And those additional inferences would consist
only of the instances' class memberships (and their non-memberships).
I'm wondering a) whether I'm missing something here and am in error, and
if not, b) whether the above was indeed the extent of what you wanted to
achieve with DSW. Either way, what are your current plans with the
ontology? It doesn't seem to have changed for a while.
(And please forgive me if this isn't the right list to post to - I
couldn't find a DSW-specific one on the Google code homepage.)
Cheers,
-hilmar
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: Hilmar Lapp -:- Durham, NC -:- informatics.nescent.org :
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