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May 2013
- 12 participants
- 9 discussions
09 Aug '13
**
Hi Everyone,
The Georeferencing Working Group at iDigBio is pleased to announce our
first "Train-the-Trainers" Georeferencing Workshop for Thematic
Collections Networks (TCNs) and others in engaged in the digitization of
biological collections in the United States. See:
https://www.idigbio.org/content/idigbios-first-train-trainers-georeferencin…
for details. Three slots are still available in this workshop that is
designed to focus on training participants to teach others to
georeference. If you are interested, please send an application
describing the reason(s) for your interest in the workshop, the current
and future projects that will benefit from your attendance, and any
previous experience you have with georeferencing to iDigBio's Program
Assistant, Cathy Bester, cbester(a)flmnh.ufl.edu
What: Train-the-Trainers -- Georeferencing Workshop
Where: University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
Who: Interested members of current TCNs and others in the biodiversity
natural history collections community.
When: October 8-12, 2012
Contact: Deborah Paul dpaul(a)fsu.edu for further information.
Best, Deb and the iDigBio Georeferencing Working Group
Deborah Paul
User Services, iDigBio
Institute for Digital Information, iDigInfo
Florida State University
Tallahassee, Florida 32308
850-644-6366
2
2
Dear all,
TDWG could see a lot of activity in 2013 in anticipation of the meeting in
Florence in October. Much of the activity is related to enabling
integration across multiple parts of our domain. We have the Audubon Core
under review for biodiversity-related media and an impending RDF Guide to
supplement the already extant Text and XML Guides for Darwin Core.
This message is to bring your attention to another integrative initiative,
to introduce terms into Darwin Core that will form a nexus between
Occurrences and the interesting things that happen with physical materials
that result from them, such as, but not limited to, genetic sequencing. A
series of meetings for a little over the past year have inspired our
colleagues in the Genomics Standards Consortium (GSC) to propose to their
constituency to align their terms with Darwin Core, including adopting some
of the Darwin Core terms in place of their own that have the same meaning.
Out of these discussions has come the realization that neither community
has terms to accommodate the concept of an identifiable (objectively, not
taxonomically), trackable material sample. This message constitutes such a
proposal.
This proposal would have no impact on those publishing purely taxonomic
data. It would also have no impact on those publishing occurrence data
unless they want to increase their capacity to distinguish material samples
from organisms more rigorously than is now possible using only the
dwc:preparations term.
The initial request for new terms can be found in the Darwin Core Issue
tracker as http://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=167. Below
I have elaborated nad formalized the request into the three distinct terms
under consideration, initiating the 30 day minimum public review process to
seek consensus on their inclusion in the Darwin Core standard. Your job,
should you choose to accept it, is to discuss the merits or any perceived
problems in the inclusion of these three terms in Darwin Core.
Below I will give the proposed properties of three terms as they would
appear in the Darwin Core Quick Reference Guide, though these properties
would be included in the RDF of the normative form of the documentation.
A new MaterialSample class: This is for the purpose of organizing
properties, just as the existing classes (Occurrence, Event, Location,
GeologicalContext, Identification, Taxon, etc.) do, without having any
terms declare this class as their domain.
Term Name: MaterialSample
Identifier: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/MaterialSample
Namespace: http:/rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms
Label: Material Sample
Definition: The category of information pertaining to the physical results
of a sampling (or subsampling) event. In biological collections, the
material sample is typically collected, and either preserved or
destructively processed, with the intention of being representative of a
greater whole.
Comment: For discussion see
http://code.google.com/p/darwincore/wiki/MaterialSample (this page will not
exist until the term is ratified).
Type of Term: http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#Class
Refines:
Status: proposed
Date Issued: 2013-03-28
Date Modified: 2013-04-08
Has Domain:
Has Range:
Version: MaterialSample-2013-03-28
Replaces:
IsReplaceBy:
Class:
ABCD 2.0.6: not in ABCD (someone please confirm or deny this)
A Darwin Core Type Vocabulary value for basisOfRecord is needed to
represent this new class of information. Luckily, a term already exists in
the Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (
http://www.ontobee.org/browser/rdf.php?o=OBI&iri=http://purl.obolibrary.org…).
We and the GSC both propose to reuse this class within Darwin Core as
below, making it the cross-ver point between the two domains.
Term Name: MaterialSample
Identifier: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/MaterialSample
Namespace: http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0000747
Label: material sample
Definition: A material entity that has the material sample role
Comment: For discussion see
http://code.google.com/p/darwincore/wiki/DwCTypeVocabulary (there will be
no further documentation here until the term is ratified)
Type of Term: http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#Class
Refines:http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0100051
Status: recommended
Date Issued: 2013-03-28
Date Modified: 2013-03-28
Has Domain:
Has Range:
Version: MaterialSample-2013-03-28
Replaces:
IsReplaceBy:
Class:
ABCD 2.0.6: not in ABCD
In keeping with all other classes in Darwin Core, the Material Sample class
would have a corresponding identifier property. The Genomics Standards
Consortium (GSC) is in the process of proposing this term. If it is
accepted, we propose to use it, and its properties would be as below,
otherwise, the properties would be the same, but have the Darwin Core
namespace and identifier URI.
Term Name: materialSampleID
Identifier: http://gensc.org/ns/mixs/materialSampleID
Namespace: http://gensc.org/ns/mixs
Label: Material Sample ID
Definition: An identifier for the MaterialSample (as opposed to a
particular digital record of the material sample). In the absence of a
persistent global unique identifier, construct one from a combination of
identifiers in the record that will most closely make the materialSampleID
globally unique.
Comment: For discussion see
http://code.google.com/p/darwincore/wiki/MaterialSample (this page will not
exist until the term is ratified).
Type of Term: http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#Property
Refines: http://purl.org/dc/terms/identifier
Status: proposed
Date Issued: 2013-03-28
Date Modified: 2013-04-08
Has Domain:
Has Range:
Version: materialSampleID-2013-03-28
Replaces:
IsReplaceBy:
Class: http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0000747
ABCD 2.0.6: not in ABCD (someone please confirm or deny this)
10
32
Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to material samples
by Richard Pyle 01 Jun '13
by Richard Pyle 01 Jun '13
01 Jun '13
Hi Ramona,
I apologize for the long emails, but this stuff is complex and unfortunately
requires lots of words (to avoid - or at least minimize - misunderstanding).
I will try to keep my responses to your points short.
> Using the word "individual" to describe collections of organisms -
> whether they are taxonomically homogenous or heterogeneous - makes no
sense.
> Yes, I know it is just a label, but seriously, just make a better label.
Yes, I agree. But it's what we already have in DWC
(http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/index.htm#individualID) I have no problem
using a different term, but before we choose terms, we should first define
what the concepts are.
> A single organism and a collection of organisms are fundamentally
different things.
Actually, not really different things. Many natural history collections
maintain their specimens as "lots", which may have a single individual
specimen, or multiple specimens. Regardless of whether it's a single
specimen or multiple specimens, the basic properties are the same (same
collecting event, sme taxonomic identification, and many other identical
properties). This becomes especially true for colonial organisms (like
corals, where the "individual" could be interpreted as a single polyp). It's
also true for other use cases we deal with that are outside the DWC/TDWG
scope.
> If you need a class that can cover both of them under certain
circumstances,
> you need to use a logical definition to define the circumstances (just
like the
> class material sample does by using the criterion of having a material
sample role).
> In order to do this, you also need to have separate classes for individual
organism
> and collection of organisms.
We have tried to do this by distinguishing instances as "Lot" or "Whole
Organism" -- which could be thought of as distinct subclasses (though again,
they generally share the same properties). The same is true for tissue
samples, and other "parts".
> I agree whole-heartedly with the need to clearly track stakeholders needs
> for different classes of things, using a logical system to decide how
these
> things relate to one another, examining alternative systems for creating
> the classes of things, and testing them against use cases (Steve's points
1-4).
> This is precisely what we are trying to do with the bio-collections
ontology
> (BCO). The suggestion to use the term material sample came out of just
> such a process. It is important to remember that the stakeholders include
> more than just the community using DwC.
It seems we are all in full agreement on these points. In my case, I am
especially in agreement with the last point, as much of our thinking has
been independent of the TDWG/DWC thinking, but still keeping that set of
use-cases in mind.
Aloha,
Rich
4
7
Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to material samples
by Richard Pyle 31 May '13
by Richard Pyle 31 May '13
31 May '13
Thanks Ramona;
Actually, the basic elements of our data mode precede DwC by quite a bit.
What weve tried to do, however, is mold the data model to be more
compatible with DwC, to make the task of mapping for data export & exchange
that much easier. Of course, DwC is not (and is not intend to be) a data
model in any sense of the word; however, its impossible to avoid
representing core elements of a bona-fide data model within DwC. This is
especially true when it comes to each of the ID terms (and
doubly-especially true when the ID terms correlate to class terms). The
existence of an ID term implies that some class of object exists to which
an ID value is applied. The ID value itself is never useful
data/metadata it is just a way to reference a data record that
(presumably) contains properties that can be expressed as data/metadata for
the object represented by the ID value.
This was all well-understood when the original DwC was being drafted; but as
it evolved into its current iteration (with the addition of all the ID
terms), it has been drawn ever more (in some ways subtly, and in some ways
not-so-subtly) in the direction of a data model.
Of course, what we all (desperately!) need is a robust ontology that fits
our world. The task is not easy in part because our data domain is not so
easily modeled, in part because different sections of our broader community
have different priorities, and in part because there is always a delicate
balance between developing a model or ontology that is practical and useful
for the data providers and consumers, with one that is robust and detailed
and flexible, to allow asking questions of the data that were never even
considered at the time the model/ontology were conceived. The parallel
experience in database modeling is normalization (as Paul Kirk likes to say:
Normalize until it hurts; then de-normalize until it works).
The original DwC was completely flat. The current DwC moved into the
direction of more complex structures by clustering terms into classes and
sprinkling with ID terms. It even tip-toed into RDF-space with
dwc:ResourceRelationship. I think thats definitely an improvement, but it
still must strike a delicate balance between the needs by some to represent
a robust data model, and the needs by others to have a simple/practical
mechanism to exchange biodiversity data in a standard form. It will never
be all things to all people; but at least it is enough things to enough
people that it represents an important flag pole around which our
community has (more or less) successfully rallied.
Hmmmm
. Now Ive forgotten what my point was. I guess I was just in a
ramblin mood. Well
.sorry about the bandwidth!
Aloha,
Rich
From: Ramona Walls [mailto:rlwalls2008@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, May 30, 2013 6:05 PM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: Jason Holmberg; TDWG Content Mailing List; John Deck; Robert Whitton
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Jason,
Thanks for sharing how you have been using the Darwin Core terms. I am
intrigued by the data structure you have developed. It is quite interesting
how both you and Rich have adapted the DwC to fit your specific needs. While
I am often troubled by the vagueness of DwC, I guess in some ways it is that
vagueness allows it to be used in many different applications. Of course, I
don't think vagueness is necessary for wide application, or a good thing for
data exchange, but it does seem to be working for a lot of different
purposes.
Ramona
On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 3:07 PM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Hi Jason,
Many thanks for this input. If I understand you correctly, then you are
using Encounter as equivalent to what we have been using Occurrence for.
That is, by our definition, an Occurrence is the instance representing an
intersection between an Event (i.e., where, when, who, etc.) and what we
have been calling an Individual (i.e., what); and the properties we attach
to the Occurrence are the how bits (including things like size, etc.).
In my mind, the essence of an Individual is the collective physical
material of the individual. If I see a fish on a reef, its Occurrence on
that reef and at that time exists (and is worth documenting) regardless of
whether I took an image of it (what we would call Evidence), or whether I
took a tissue sample from it, or whether I collected and killed the whole
damn thing. To me, the essence of the individual or its occurrence at
an event is unaffected by what I end up doing to it. By extension,
following a hierarchical model of individual, a sub-sample
(materialSample) extracted from it is just another instance of Individual.
This is why I generally think of materialSample (if it were represented as
a class which it is currently not propsed for DWC) as a subclass of a
broader concept (e.g., material, but what I have naively been referring to
as Individual).
That part of our model has proven to be very stable and effective for
representing the information as we want it.
Where it gets complicated is instances of taxonomically heterogeneous
objects treated as a single individual which (in my mind) includes such
things as soil samples.
In that contect, I see (and agree) with John and others that really its a
separate axis of classification from what I have called Individual.
I dont expect that to make a lot of sense (I barely understand it myself).
Aloha,
Rich
From: Jason Holmberg [mailto:holmbergius@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, May 30, 2013 11:28 AM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: Ramona Walls; TDWG Content Mailing List; John Deck; Robert Whitton
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Hi everyone.
List lurker here. DWC has been a great inspiration in my work, so I hope I
can contribute some small amount of insight on the "individual" and
"material sample" threads. I have no grand thoughts on the subject, but I
can tell you how the DWC has inspired my own information architecture for
open source mark-recapture software:
http://www.ecoceanusa.org/shepherd/doku.php?id=manual:2.0.x:1_overview
I felt the very clear need for a distinct Individual Class and to separate
that from the concept of a sample taken from nature. When reviewing DWC, I
interpreted Occurrence.individualCount to be somewhat contradictory to
Occurrence.individualID, so I created a one-individual-at-a-point-in-time
class called Encounter that reuses quite a bit of DWC.Occurrence. Occurrence
I then broadened to include the potential for multiple marked individuals.
I neither present this as "right" nor "good" (though they have worked very
well for us). I just present it as a practical example from mark-recapture
in which we have tried to adhere to DWC in order to expose data to GBIF,
iOBIS, etc. The concepts of "material sample" and "individual" are very
important to us, and this is how we have defined them.
Cheers,
Jason Holmberg
ECOCEAN Whale Shark Photo-identification Library
http://www.whaleshark.org
Please consider adopting a shark to support our mission:
http://www.whaleshark.org/adoptashark.jsp
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 4:13 PM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Hi Ramona,
Yes, I agree, and thanks. Ive always felt that there has been a trend
towards trying to push too much ontology (or other semantic meaning) onto
DWC terms and classes, when DWC was fundamentally intended to represent an
mechanism for data exchange; not a mechanism to describe the ontological
landscape of biodiversity data. The only reason I brought this up now (and,
I think, why we discussed it in 2010), is that the term individualID in
DWC sort of hinted that something like Individual was the forgotten
class for DWC. I sincerely hope that BCO and DSW gain more traction (and,
ideally, harmony between them) than earlier attempts at developing
ontologies in this space have met and clearly that is the right path
forward.
My main concern for this thread (and the reason I engaged in it), was to:
1) Find out the status of the discussions that began in 2010; and
2) Clarify where the current materialSample proposal overlaps, or does
not overlap, with that earlier effort.
Steve has very adequately answered the first question, and you, John, and
others have answered the second, and Im happy with both sets of answers.
Im sorry for the voluminous exchange, but I felt the discussion was both
important, and very helpful (certainly to me).
Aloha,
Rich
From: Ramona Walls [mailto:rlwalls2008@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 1:03 PM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: John Deck; Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List;
Robert Whitton
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Hi Rich,
Sorry I didn't mention this sooner, but your emails were also helpful to me
in describing an important and generalizable use case.
I don't know whether or not the TDWG community is ready to deal with the
level of abstraction we are talking about, but my assessment is that whether
or not they are ready, the Darwin Core is not constructed to deal with it.
That is why (among other reasons) we started work on the BCO, and perhaps
one reason why Steve and others developed DSW.
Our goal with the material sample proposal was not to overhaul DwC, but to
work within the DwC framework to make it more compatible with other
standards such as MIxS. That is why we tried to keep our proposal fairly
narrowly focused.
Ramona
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 3:21 PM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Thanks, Ramona this is an *extremely* helpful email! It helps clear things
up a lot in my mind.
Just to be clear, what I am looking for is the notion of a defined physical
object (what I think you mean by material entity), and I explicitly mean
the material entity itself. Yes, there is information (properties) that
relate to that material entity, but to me that is a separate issue. What I
would like to see clearly defined is the class representing the material
(physical) entity which seems to me to be a superclass of what
materialSample is intended to represent.
Perhaps our (TDWG/DWC) community is not yet ready to deal with this level of
abstraction (unfortunately, I absolutely have to, because Occurrence is
simply way too overloaded a class for me to use independently of what I have
been calling individual and what I have been calling Evidence). In that
case, I guess the best thing to do is accept materialSample as a
basisOfRecord for Occurrence and move on. But this is more or less the same
thing that happened the last time we engaged in this conversation (2 years
or so ago), and I was hoping this conversation about materialSample could
leverage progress on the larger issue.
As Ive said before, the last thing I want to do is confuse or otherwise
slow down the process of incorporating the term materialSample into DWC.
Its just that I saw enough overlap with that other issue, that I was
hoping we could find a reasonable pathway forward on both.
Thanks again for the very helpful comments.
Aloha,
Rich
From: Ramona Walls [mailto:rlwalls2008@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 9:14 AM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: John Deck; Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List;
Robert Whitton
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Rich,
I now understand more fully what you are asking for ( a clear definition
goes a long way!). A material sample, as we discussed it at the Kansas and
Oxford workshops, does indeed need to be physically removed from its
environment. This is also the case with the OBI term material sample, which,
as a subclass of OBI:specimen is the output of some collecting process. It
is true that concept of material sample could be defined to include sampling
in an observational sense, but that is not how it is defined at this point.
Based on this, material sample is NOT the term you are looking for or
defined as :
"The category of information pertaining to the physical basis of a sampling,
subsampling, or observational event. In biological collections, the
[SuperclassTerm] is typically a defined group of organisms, a single whole
organism, or a part of a whole organism that is collected or otherwise
documented in nature, and either preserved, destructively processed, or
documented through some form of Evidence (such as images or reported visual
observations)."
What you have defined is a category of information (whatever that may be)
that pertains to some material entity. Not the material entity itself, but
information about that entity. The "SuperclassTerm" you refer to in the
definition sounds an awful lot like a material entity from the Basic Formal
Ontology, which is used for defining material sample in OBI and the
Bio-collections Ontology.
Ramona
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 11:51 AM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Many thanks, John. This is extremely helpful!
First of all, in the context of a distinct term for basisOfRecord, I see
absolutely no problem with adding the term MaterialSample. I fully support
your proposal (although if this is simply a basisOfRecord term to be used
alongside Occurrence, PreservedSpecimen, LivingSpecimen, FossilSpecimen,
HumanObservation, MachineObservation; does it need a defined ID term? Do
all the others have defined ID terms?).
However, Im excited by this conversation because I think we are very close
to solving a bigger problem (which was the focus of the 2010 discussion on
this list around IndividualOrganism).
This bigger problem involves the need for a defined concept (Im
hesitating to say class), and an associated ID, in dwc that refers to
the physical/material basis of an Occurrence. We dont yet have a term for
this concept in dwc (IndividualID hinted at the need for one, but that
term was not well-defined, and the term itself seems to cause confusion).
As Steve Baskauf and I have both been advocating for the establishment of
new class in dwc for exactly this purpose, I just want to make sure that
were on the same page about what each concept is. The more I understand
about what you need for materalSample, the more convinced I am that both
of our needs can be met with the same concept.
I am perfectly happy to adopt the term MaterialSample, but I guess it all
boils down to this: In order for something to be a MaterialSample, must it
necessarily be removed from nature?
If the answer is No, then I think we can merge the two concepts into one.
If the answer is Yes, then I think materialSample is best characterized
as a subclass of what Steve and I have been pushing for (setting aside, for
the moment, the additional complexity of taxonomically homogeneous vs.
heterogeneous).
In the latter case, I would define the superclass (whatever term is used for
it), along the lines of:
"The category of information pertaining to the physical basis of a sampling,
subsampling, or observational event. In biological collections, the
[SuperclassTerm] is typically a defined group of organisms, a single whole
organism, or a part of a whole organism that is collected or otherwise
documented in nature, and either preserved, destructively processed, or
documented through some form of Evidence (such as images or reported visual
observations)."
Aloha,
Rich
From: jdeck88(a)gmail.com [mailto:jdeck88@gmail.com] On Behalf Of John Deck
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 4:01 AM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List; Robert Whitton;
Ramona Walls
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Since the original proposal was from a group of folks, we decided to put our
heads together to construct a general response to the various issues and
ideas expressed on this thread.
John Deck for Rob Guralnick, Ramona Walls, and John Wieczorek
In the text of the issue submitted for MaterialSample (
<https://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=167>
https://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=167) we noted cases
where the current basisOfRecord terms pertaining to the Occurrence class
(Occurrence, PreservedSpecimen, LivingSpecimen, FossilSpecimen,
HumanObservation, MachineObservation) do not adequately cover certain cases,
including: environmental sample (for metagenomic analysis), transcriptomes
(measuring genes but not taxa), and destructive samples (e.g. tissues
destructively sampled in order to generate genomic DNA). The term we
borrowed from OBI (http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0000747) is broad
enough to be utilized across various cases that fulfill our criteria while
still maintaining a consistent, clear and human understandable meaning. For
our purposes, we can think of Material Sample as any type of matter that
we can use in order derive further evidence needed for identifications, and
taxa, whether it is taxonomically homogenous, heterogenous, a single
individual, sets of individuals, or populations.
How is MaterialSample different from Individual? The intent of individualID
is fairly clear: since an Occurrence represents an organism at a place and
time (per Markus email), the individualID term allows us to assign an
instance identifier for a particular organism that can be present in
multiple events. MaterialSampleID, on the other hand, is intended to allow
users to say that the basis of an occurence is a material entity (i.e.
matter) that has been sampled according to some particular method. Whether
or not this material entity is an individual (sensu individualID in DwC) is
an independent axis of classification. As was already pointed out, there is
no restriction on specifying that an occurence is associated with more than
one type, so any occurrence can have both an individualID and a
materialSampleID.
We maintain our position on the proposal for MaterialSample as a value for
the basisOfRecord, with an associated materialSampleID to identify instances
of them. Per Steves initial comments, we have already withdrawn the
proposal for a MaterialSample class distinct from that in the Darwin Core
type vocabulary, which should make it easier to evaluate the implications of
what were discussing.
********************
NOTES, MaterialSample from OBI:
OBI has fairly broad definitions of samples & specimens that are meant to be
utilized across many different scientific activities. Material Sample is
defined as a material entity that has the material sample role, while a
material sample role is defined as a specimen role borne by a material
entity that is the output of a material sampling process, and a material
sampling process is a specimen gathering process with the objective to
obtain a specimen that is representative of the input material entity.
On Mon, May 27, 2013 at 11:59 PM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Hi Markus,
Great question! Particularly because this is exactly the sort of use case
we designed our model around.
> if you take a tissue sample of the same tree every year, would the
identifier
> in individualID be the same for all of them or be different? WIth the
current
> dwc:individualID definition it would be the same for all samples. If I
> understand you correct each sample would have its own "individual"
> identifier in your proposal? It can't see how you can collapse these two
things
> into one definition.
No, that is not how we would handle it.
In our model, there would be one IndividualID to represent the tree,
spanning the time period beginning (more or less) when the seed was
germinated, until the time at which the entire physical structure of the
tree was disintegrated. It is an individual tree.
There would be multiple Occurrence instances, for each time that someone
observed or sampled or otherwise wished to document some condition of that
tree. All of these Occurrence instances would refer to the same individualID
value (i.e., the "tree"). In the example above, this means there would be a
different Occurrence instance for each year that a sample is taken --
because in each case, an assertion that the full tree existed at a certain
time and place can be made (I understand that trees tend not to move around
very much, so the Location for each event associated with each Occurrence
would, in this case, remain the same; but the other Event properties -- such
as eventID, samplingProtocol, samplingEffort, eventDate, eventTime,
startDayOfYear, endDayOfYear, year, month, day, verbatimEventDate, habitat,
fieldNumber, fieldNotes, eventRemarks -- would be documented accordingly for
each sampling Occurrence instance).
Suppose that the tree is visited every month, but only sampled once per
year. In that case, there would be an Occurrence record for every monthly
visit. In other words, an Occurrence instance exists regardless of whether
a physical sample was made or not. Any in-situ images made of the tree
would likewise be associated with the specific Occurrence instance, and each
image would represent a separate instance of "Evidence".
Now, let's focus on the annual samplings. Every time a new sample is taken
from the tree, at least one new instance of Individual (with a unique
individualID value) is created to represent the sample. This sample
(individual instance) may be a "gathering" (set of multiple individual
specimens gathered at the same time), or it may be a single specimen, or it
may be simply a tissue sample intended for destructive analysis. In any
case, it's a new individual instance derived from the "parent" individual
instance representing the whole tree. In our implementation, "Individual"
can be hierarchical, such that a whole-organism tree can be sub-sampled with
many "child" instances of "gatherings" (say, one gathering each year), and
each gathering may have multiple child "specimen" individuals (e.g.
individual botanical sheets created from the multiple items of a single
gathering), and each specimen may have further "child" subsamples extracted
for DNA analysis (or whatever), and the hierarchy can continue on down to
whatever derivatives that people feel a need to keep track of (e.g.,
aliquot).
The point is, all Individual instances are well-defined physical objects (or
well-defined sets of physical objects), and they can be arranged in a
n-tiered hierarchy.
Moreover, each Individual that can be characterized as a "sample" (what we
refer to as a "CollectionObject") may also have a property value for
"CollectionOccurrenceID" -- which refers to the specific Occurrence instance
at which the sample was obtained.
So, for example, if the tree is visited on May 27, 2013 and a specimen
(sample) is taken, then:
1) An Event instance is generated to represent the event where the tree was
visited;
2) An Occurrence instance is generated, which refers to the new EventID, and
the existing IndividualID for the whole tree, and includes whatever other
Occurrence properties are relevant for the tree at the time of this
Occurrence
3) An Individual instance is generated for the specimen, which has a
property value for parentIndividualID that refers to the individualID for
the whole tree, and a property value for collectionOccurrenceID that refers
the Occurrence instance where the specimen was collected.
So, to summarize the answer to your question:
- There are multiple Occurrence instances that refer to the same Individual
instance representing the whole tree (and, hence can be collapsed to the
same IndividualID value).
- Any Individual can have derivatives that are themselves unique Individual
instances.
- Individuals are arranged hierarchically, and certain properties can be
inherited up or down the hierarchy, depending on the properties and their
associated logical constraints.
At some point, I will assemble a set of other specific use cases, and how we
manage them through our use of the "Individual" instance (although I will
probably not use the word "Individual", as this seems to cause too much
confusion in these discussions).
Aloha,
Rich
--
John Deck
(541) 321-0689 <tel:%28541%29%20321-0689>
_______________________________________________
tdwg-content mailing list
tdwg-content(a)lists.tdwg.org
http://lists.tdwg.org/mailman/listinfo/tdwg-content
5
13
Apologies in advance- this is a little off topic but I think it should
be of interest to many here.
For a second year we are teaching a "Ontologies for Evolutionary
Biology" sponsored by NESCent on July 29th in Durham, NC. Details are
here: http://bit.ly/ZAQ6Dt . Please forward this to any interested
parties. Last year we had a broad spectrum of "students", from
advanced undergrads to Professors nearing retirement.
If you have questions please message me off-list.
Thanks,
Matt Yoder
Biological Informatician
Illinois Natural History Survey
1
0
Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to material samples
by Richard Pyle 30 May '13
by Richard Pyle 30 May '13
30 May '13
Hi Ramona,
Yes, I agree, and thanks. Ive always felt that there has been a trend
towards trying to push too much ontology (or other semantic meaning) onto
DWC terms and classes, when DWC was fundamentally intended to represent an
mechanism for data exchange; not a mechanism to describe the ontological
landscape of biodiversity data. The only reason I brought this up now (and,
I think, why we discussed it in 2010), is that the term individualID in
DWC sort of hinted that something like Individual was the forgotten
class for DWC. I sincerely hope that BCO and DSW gain more traction (and,
ideally, harmony between them) than earlier attempts at developing
ontologies in this space have met and clearly that is the right path
forward.
My main concern for this thread (and the reason I engaged in it), was to:
1) Find out the status of the discussions that began in 2010; and
2) Clarify where the current materialSample proposal overlaps, or does
not overlap, with that earlier effort.
Steve has very adequately answered the first question, and you, John, and
others have answered the second, and Im happy with both sets of answers.
Im sorry for the voluminous exchange, but I felt the discussion was both
important, and very helpful (certainly to me).
Aloha,
Rich
From: Ramona Walls [mailto:rlwalls2008@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 1:03 PM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: John Deck; Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List;
Robert Whitton
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Hi Rich,
Sorry I didn't mention this sooner, but your emails were also helpful to me
in describing an important and generalizable use case.
I don't know whether or not the TDWG community is ready to deal with the
level of abstraction we are talking about, but my assessment is that whether
or not they are ready, the Darwin Core is not constructed to deal with it.
That is why (among other reasons) we started work on the BCO, and perhaps
one reason why Steve and others developed DSW.
Our goal with the material sample proposal was not to overhaul DwC, but to
work within the DwC framework to make it more compatible with other
standards such as MIxS. That is why we tried to keep our proposal fairly
narrowly focused.
Ramona
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 3:21 PM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Thanks, Ramona this is an *extremely* helpful email! It helps clear things
up a lot in my mind.
Just to be clear, what I am looking for is the notion of a defined physical
object (what I think you mean by material entity), and I explicitly mean
the material entity itself. Yes, there is information (properties) that
relate to that material entity, but to me that is a separate issue. What I
would like to see clearly defined is the class representing the material
(physical) entity which seems to me to be a superclass of what
materialSample is intended to represent.
Perhaps our (TDWG/DWC) community is not yet ready to deal with this level of
abstraction (unfortunately, I absolutely have to, because Occurrence is
simply way too overloaded a class for me to use independently of what I have
been calling individual and what I have been calling Evidence). In that
case, I guess the best thing to do is accept materialSample as a
basisOfRecord for Occurrence and move on. But this is more or less the same
thing that happened the last time we engaged in this conversation (2 years
or so ago), and I was hoping this conversation about materialSample could
leverage progress on the larger issue.
As Ive said before, the last thing I want to do is confuse or otherwise
slow down the process of incorporating the term materialSample into DWC.
Its just that I saw enough overlap with that other issue, that I was
hoping we could find a reasonable pathway forward on both.
Thanks again for the very helpful comments.
Aloha,
Rich
From: Ramona Walls [mailto:rlwalls2008@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 9:14 AM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: John Deck; Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List;
Robert Whitton
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Rich,
I now understand more fully what you are asking for ( a clear definition
goes a long way!). A material sample, as we discussed it at the Kansas and
Oxford workshops, does indeed need to be physically removed from its
environment. This is also the case with the OBI term material sample, which,
as a subclass of OBI:specimen is the output of some collecting process. It
is true that concept of material sample could be defined to include sampling
in an observational sense, but that is not how it is defined at this point.
Based on this, material sample is NOT the term you are looking for or
defined as :
"The category of information pertaining to the physical basis of a sampling,
subsampling, or observational event. In biological collections, the
[SuperclassTerm] is typically a defined group of organisms, a single whole
organism, or a part of a whole organism that is collected or otherwise
documented in nature, and either preserved, destructively processed, or
documented through some form of Evidence (such as images or reported visual
observations)."
What you have defined is a category of information (whatever that may be)
that pertains to some material entity. Not the material entity itself, but
information about that entity. The "SuperclassTerm" you refer to in the
definition sounds an awful lot like a material entity from the Basic Formal
Ontology, which is used for defining material sample in OBI and the
Bio-collections Ontology.
Ramona
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 11:51 AM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Many thanks, John. This is extremely helpful!
First of all, in the context of a distinct term for basisOfRecord, I see
absolutely no problem with adding the term MaterialSample. I fully support
your proposal (although if this is simply a basisOfRecord term to be used
alongside Occurrence, PreservedSpecimen, LivingSpecimen, FossilSpecimen,
HumanObservation, MachineObservation; does it need a defined ID term? Do
all the others have defined ID terms?).
However, Im excited by this conversation because I think we are very close
to solving a bigger problem (which was the focus of the 2010 discussion on
this list around IndividualOrganism).
This bigger problem involves the need for a defined concept (Im
hesitating to say class), and an associated ID, in dwc that refers to
the physical/material basis of an Occurrence. We dont yet have a term for
this concept in dwc (IndividualID hinted at the need for one, but that
term was not well-defined, and the term itself seems to cause confusion).
As Steve Baskauf and I have both been advocating for the establishment of
new class in dwc for exactly this purpose, I just want to make sure that
were on the same page about what each concept is. The more I understand
about what you need for materalSample, the more convinced I am that both
of our needs can be met with the same concept.
I am perfectly happy to adopt the term MaterialSample, but I guess it all
boils down to this: In order for something to be a MaterialSample, must it
necessarily be removed from nature?
If the answer is No, then I think we can merge the two concepts into one.
If the answer is Yes, then I think materialSample is best characterized
as a subclass of what Steve and I have been pushing for (setting aside, for
the moment, the additional complexity of taxonomically homogeneous vs.
heterogeneous).
In the latter case, I would define the superclass (whatever term is used for
it), along the lines of:
"The category of information pertaining to the physical basis of a sampling,
subsampling, or observational event. In biological collections, the
[SuperclassTerm] is typically a defined group of organisms, a single whole
organism, or a part of a whole organism that is collected or otherwise
documented in nature, and either preserved, destructively processed, or
documented through some form of Evidence (such as images or reported visual
observations)."
Aloha,
Rich
From: jdeck88(a)gmail.com [mailto:jdeck88@gmail.com] On Behalf Of John Deck
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 4:01 AM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List; Robert Whitton;
Ramona Walls
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Since the original proposal was from a group of folks, we decided to put our
heads together to construct a general response to the various issues and
ideas expressed on this thread.
John Deck for Rob Guralnick, Ramona Walls, and John Wieczorek
In the text of the issue submitted for MaterialSample (
<https://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=167>
https://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=167) we noted cases
where the current basisOfRecord terms pertaining to the Occurrence class
(Occurrence, PreservedSpecimen, LivingSpecimen, FossilSpecimen,
HumanObservation, MachineObservation) do not adequately cover certain cases,
including: environmental sample (for metagenomic analysis), transcriptomes
(measuring genes but not taxa), and destructive samples (e.g. tissues
destructively sampled in order to generate genomic DNA). The term we
borrowed from OBI (http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0000747) is broad
enough to be utilized across various cases that fulfill our criteria while
still maintaining a consistent, clear and human understandable meaning. For
our purposes, we can think of Material Sample as any type of matter that
we can use in order derive further evidence needed for identifications, and
taxa, whether it is taxonomically homogenous, heterogenous, a single
individual, sets of individuals, or populations.
How is MaterialSample different from Individual? The intent of individualID
is fairly clear: since an Occurrence represents an organism at a place and
time (per Markus email), the individualID term allows us to assign an
instance identifier for a particular organism that can be present in
multiple events. MaterialSampleID, on the other hand, is intended to allow
users to say that the basis of an occurence is a material entity (i.e.
matter) that has been sampled according to some particular method. Whether
or not this material entity is an individual (sensu individualID in DwC) is
an independent axis of classification. As was already pointed out, there is
no restriction on specifying that an occurence is associated with more than
one type, so any occurrence can have both an individualID and a
materialSampleID.
We maintain our position on the proposal for MaterialSample as a value for
the basisOfRecord, with an associated materialSampleID to identify instances
of them. Per Steves initial comments, we have already withdrawn the
proposal for a MaterialSample class distinct from that in the Darwin Core
type vocabulary, which should make it easier to evaluate the implications of
what were discussing.
********************
NOTES, MaterialSample from OBI:
OBI has fairly broad definitions of samples & specimens that are meant to be
utilized across many different scientific activities. Material Sample is
defined as a material entity that has the material sample role, while a
material sample role is defined as a specimen role borne by a material
entity that is the output of a material sampling process, and a material
sampling process is a specimen gathering process with the objective to
obtain a specimen that is representative of the input material entity.
On Mon, May 27, 2013 at 11:59 PM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Hi Markus,
Great question! Particularly because this is exactly the sort of use case
we designed our model around.
> if you take a tissue sample of the same tree every year, would the
identifier
> in individualID be the same for all of them or be different? WIth the
current
> dwc:individualID definition it would be the same for all samples. If I
> understand you correct each sample would have its own "individual"
> identifier in your proposal? It can't see how you can collapse these two
things
> into one definition.
No, that is not how we would handle it.
In our model, there would be one IndividualID to represent the tree,
spanning the time period beginning (more or less) when the seed was
germinated, until the time at which the entire physical structure of the
tree was disintegrated. It is an individual tree.
There would be multiple Occurrence instances, for each time that someone
observed or sampled or otherwise wished to document some condition of that
tree. All of these Occurrence instances would refer to the same individualID
value (i.e., the "tree"). In the example above, this means there would be a
different Occurrence instance for each year that a sample is taken --
because in each case, an assertion that the full tree existed at a certain
time and place can be made (I understand that trees tend not to move around
very much, so the Location for each event associated with each Occurrence
would, in this case, remain the same; but the other Event properties -- such
as eventID, samplingProtocol, samplingEffort, eventDate, eventTime,
startDayOfYear, endDayOfYear, year, month, day, verbatimEventDate, habitat,
fieldNumber, fieldNotes, eventRemarks -- would be documented accordingly for
each sampling Occurrence instance).
Suppose that the tree is visited every month, but only sampled once per
year. In that case, there would be an Occurrence record for every monthly
visit. In other words, an Occurrence instance exists regardless of whether
a physical sample was made or not. Any in-situ images made of the tree
would likewise be associated with the specific Occurrence instance, and each
image would represent a separate instance of "Evidence".
Now, let's focus on the annual samplings. Every time a new sample is taken
from the tree, at least one new instance of Individual (with a unique
individualID value) is created to represent the sample. This sample
(individual instance) may be a "gathering" (set of multiple individual
specimens gathered at the same time), or it may be a single specimen, or it
may be simply a tissue sample intended for destructive analysis. In any
case, it's a new individual instance derived from the "parent" individual
instance representing the whole tree. In our implementation, "Individual"
can be hierarchical, such that a whole-organism tree can be sub-sampled with
many "child" instances of "gatherings" (say, one gathering each year), and
each gathering may have multiple child "specimen" individuals (e.g.
individual botanical sheets created from the multiple items of a single
gathering), and each specimen may have further "child" subsamples extracted
for DNA analysis (or whatever), and the hierarchy can continue on down to
whatever derivatives that people feel a need to keep track of (e.g.,
aliquot).
The point is, all Individual instances are well-defined physical objects (or
well-defined sets of physical objects), and they can be arranged in a
n-tiered hierarchy.
Moreover, each Individual that can be characterized as a "sample" (what we
refer to as a "CollectionObject") may also have a property value for
"CollectionOccurrenceID" -- which refers to the specific Occurrence instance
at which the sample was obtained.
So, for example, if the tree is visited on May 27, 2013 and a specimen
(sample) is taken, then:
1) An Event instance is generated to represent the event where the tree was
visited;
2) An Occurrence instance is generated, which refers to the new EventID, and
the existing IndividualID for the whole tree, and includes whatever other
Occurrence properties are relevant for the tree at the time of this
Occurrence
3) An Individual instance is generated for the specimen, which has a
property value for parentIndividualID that refers to the individualID for
the whole tree, and a property value for collectionOccurrenceID that refers
the Occurrence instance where the specimen was collected.
So, to summarize the answer to your question:
- There are multiple Occurrence instances that refer to the same Individual
instance representing the whole tree (and, hence can be collapsed to the
same IndividualID value).
- Any Individual can have derivatives that are themselves unique Individual
instances.
- Individuals are arranged hierarchically, and certain properties can be
inherited up or down the hierarchy, depending on the properties and their
associated logical constraints.
At some point, I will assemble a set of other specific use cases, and how we
manage them through our use of the "Individual" instance (although I will
probably not use the word "Individual", as this seems to cause too much
confusion in these discussions).
Aloha,
Rich
--
John Deck
(541) 321-0689 <tel:%28541%29%20321-0689>
2
2
Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to material samples
by Richard Pyle 29 May '13
by Richard Pyle 29 May '13
29 May '13
Thanks, Ramona this is an *extremely* helpful email! It helps clear things
up a lot in my mind.
Just to be clear, what I am looking for is the notion of a defined physical
object (what I think you mean by material entity), and I explicitly mean
the material entity itself. Yes, there is information (properties) that
relate to that material entity, but to me that is a separate issue. What I
would like to see clearly defined is the class representing the material
(physical) entity which seems to me to be a superclass of what
materialSample is intended to represent.
Perhaps our (TDWG/DWC) community is not yet ready to deal with this level of
abstraction (unfortunately, I absolutely have to, because Occurrence is
simply way too overloaded a class for me to use independently of what I have
been calling individual and what I have been calling Evidence). In that
case, I guess the best thing to do is accept materialSample as a
basisOfRecord for Occurrence and move on. But this is more or less the same
thing that happened the last time we engaged in this conversation (2 years
or so ago), and I was hoping this conversation about materialSample could
leverage progress on the larger issue.
As Ive said before, the last thing I want to do is confuse or otherwise
slow down the process of incorporating the term materialSample into DWC.
Its just that I saw enough overlap with that other issue, that I was
hoping we could find a reasonable pathway forward on both.
Thanks again for the very helpful comments.
Aloha,
Rich
From: Ramona Walls [mailto:rlwalls2008@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 9:14 AM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: John Deck; Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List;
Robert Whitton
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Rich,
I now understand more fully what you are asking for ( a clear definition
goes a long way!). A material sample, as we discussed it at the Kansas and
Oxford workshops, does indeed need to be physically removed from its
environment. This is also the case with the OBI term material sample, which,
as a subclass of OBI:specimen is the output of some collecting process. It
is true that concept of material sample could be defined to include sampling
in an observational sense, but that is not how it is defined at this point.
Based on this, material sample is NOT the term you are looking for or
defined as :
"The category of information pertaining to the physical basis of a sampling,
subsampling, or observational event. In biological collections, the
[SuperclassTerm] is typically a defined group of organisms, a single whole
organism, or a part of a whole organism that is collected or otherwise
documented in nature, and either preserved, destructively processed, or
documented through some form of Evidence (such as images or reported visual
observations)."
What you have defined is a category of information (whatever that may be)
that pertains to some material entity. Not the material entity itself, but
information about that entity. The "SuperclassTerm" you refer to in the
definition sounds an awful lot like a material entity from the Basic Formal
Ontology, which is used for defining material sample in OBI and the
Bio-collections Ontology.
Ramona
On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 11:51 AM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Many thanks, John. This is extremely helpful!
First of all, in the context of a distinct term for basisOfRecord, I see
absolutely no problem with adding the term MaterialSample. I fully support
your proposal (although if this is simply a basisOfRecord term to be used
alongside Occurrence, PreservedSpecimen, LivingSpecimen, FossilSpecimen,
HumanObservation, MachineObservation; does it need a defined ID term? Do
all the others have defined ID terms?).
However, Im excited by this conversation because I think we are very close
to solving a bigger problem (which was the focus of the 2010 discussion on
this list around IndividualOrganism).
This bigger problem involves the need for a defined concept (Im
hesitating to say class), and an associated ID, in dwc that refers to
the physical/material basis of an Occurrence. We dont yet have a term for
this concept in dwc (IndividualID hinted at the need for one, but that
term was not well-defined, and the term itself seems to cause confusion).
As Steve Baskauf and I have both been advocating for the establishment of
new class in dwc for exactly this purpose, I just want to make sure that
were on the same page about what each concept is. The more I understand
about what you need for materalSample, the more convinced I am that both
of our needs can be met with the same concept.
I am perfectly happy to adopt the term MaterialSample, but I guess it all
boils down to this: In order for something to be a MaterialSample, must it
necessarily be removed from nature?
If the answer is No, then I think we can merge the two concepts into one.
If the answer is Yes, then I think materialSample is best characterized
as a subclass of what Steve and I have been pushing for (setting aside, for
the moment, the additional complexity of taxonomically homogeneous vs.
heterogeneous).
In the latter case, I would define the superclass (whatever term is used for
it), along the lines of:
"The category of information pertaining to the physical basis of a sampling,
subsampling, or observational event. In biological collections, the
[SuperclassTerm] is typically a defined group of organisms, a single whole
organism, or a part of a whole organism that is collected or otherwise
documented in nature, and either preserved, destructively processed, or
documented through some form of Evidence (such as images or reported visual
observations)."
Aloha,
Rich
From: jdeck88(a)gmail.com [mailto:jdeck88@gmail.com] On Behalf Of John Deck
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 4:01 AM
To: Richard Pyle
Cc: Markus Döring; Steve Baskauf; TDWG Content Mailing List; Robert Whitton;
Ramona Walls
Subject: Re: [tdwg-content] New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to
material samples
Since the original proposal was from a group of folks, we decided to put our
heads together to construct a general response to the various issues and
ideas expressed on this thread.
John Deck for Rob Guralnick, Ramona Walls, and John Wieczorek
In the text of the issue submitted for MaterialSample (
<https://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=167>
https://code.google.com/p/darwincore/issues/detail?id=167) we noted cases
where the current basisOfRecord terms pertaining to the Occurrence class
(Occurrence, PreservedSpecimen, LivingSpecimen, FossilSpecimen,
HumanObservation, MachineObservation) do not adequately cover certain cases,
including: environmental sample (for metagenomic analysis), transcriptomes
(measuring genes but not taxa), and destructive samples (e.g. tissues
destructively sampled in order to generate genomic DNA). The term we
borrowed from OBI (http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OBI_0000747) is broad
enough to be utilized across various cases that fulfill our criteria while
still maintaining a consistent, clear and human understandable meaning. For
our purposes, we can think of Material Sample as any type of matter that
we can use in order derive further evidence needed for identifications, and
taxa, whether it is taxonomically homogenous, heterogenous, a single
individual, sets of individuals, or populations.
How is MaterialSample different from Individual? The intent of individualID
is fairly clear: since an Occurrence represents an organism at a place and
time (per Markus email), the individualID term allows us to assign an
instance identifier for a particular organism that can be present in
multiple events. MaterialSampleID, on the other hand, is intended to allow
users to say that the basis of an occurence is a material entity (i.e.
matter) that has been sampled according to some particular method. Whether
or not this material entity is an individual (sensu individualID in DwC) is
an independent axis of classification. As was already pointed out, there is
no restriction on specifying that an occurence is associated with more than
one type, so any occurrence can have both an individualID and a
materialSampleID.
We maintain our position on the proposal for MaterialSample as a value for
the basisOfRecord, with an associated materialSampleID to identify instances
of them. Per Steves initial comments, we have already withdrawn the
proposal for a MaterialSample class distinct from that in the Darwin Core
type vocabulary, which should make it easier to evaluate the implications of
what were discussing.
********************
NOTES, MaterialSample from OBI:
OBI has fairly broad definitions of samples & specimens that are meant to be
utilized across many different scientific activities. Material Sample is
defined as a material entity that has the material sample role, while a
material sample role is defined as a specimen role borne by a material
entity that is the output of a material sampling process, and a material
sampling process is a specimen gathering process with the objective to
obtain a specimen that is representative of the input material entity.
On Mon, May 27, 2013 at 11:59 PM, Richard Pyle <deepreef(a)bishopmuseum.org>
wrote:
Hi Markus,
Great question! Particularly because this is exactly the sort of use case
we designed our model around.
> if you take a tissue sample of the same tree every year, would the
identifier
> in individualID be the same for all of them or be different? WIth the
current
> dwc:individualID definition it would be the same for all samples. If I
> understand you correct each sample would have its own "individual"
> identifier in your proposal? It can't see how you can collapse these two
things
> into one definition.
No, that is not how we would handle it.
In our model, there would be one IndividualID to represent the tree,
spanning the time period beginning (more or less) when the seed was
germinated, until the time at which the entire physical structure of the
tree was disintegrated. It is an individual tree.
There would be multiple Occurrence instances, for each time that someone
observed or sampled or otherwise wished to document some condition of that
tree. All of these Occurrence instances would refer to the same individualID
value (i.e., the "tree"). In the example above, this means there would be a
different Occurrence instance for each year that a sample is taken --
because in each case, an assertion that the full tree existed at a certain
time and place can be made (I understand that trees tend not to move around
very much, so the Location for each event associated with each Occurrence
would, in this case, remain the same; but the other Event properties -- such
as eventID, samplingProtocol, samplingEffort, eventDate, eventTime,
startDayOfYear, endDayOfYear, year, month, day, verbatimEventDate, habitat,
fieldNumber, fieldNotes, eventRemarks -- would be documented accordingly for
each sampling Occurrence instance).
Suppose that the tree is visited every month, but only sampled once per
year. In that case, there would be an Occurrence record for every monthly
visit. In other words, an Occurrence instance exists regardless of whether
a physical sample was made or not. Any in-situ images made of the tree
would likewise be associated with the specific Occurrence instance, and each
image would represent a separate instance of "Evidence".
Now, let's focus on the annual samplings. Every time a new sample is taken
from the tree, at least one new instance of Individual (with a unique
individualID value) is created to represent the sample. This sample
(individual instance) may be a "gathering" (set of multiple individual
specimens gathered at the same time), or it may be a single specimen, or it
may be simply a tissue sample intended for destructive analysis. In any
case, it's a new individual instance derived from the "parent" individual
instance representing the whole tree. In our implementation, "Individual"
can be hierarchical, such that a whole-organism tree can be sub-sampled with
many "child" instances of "gatherings" (say, one gathering each year), and
each gathering may have multiple child "specimen" individuals (e.g.
individual botanical sheets created from the multiple items of a single
gathering), and each specimen may have further "child" subsamples extracted
for DNA analysis (or whatever), and the hierarchy can continue on down to
whatever derivatives that people feel a need to keep track of (e.g.,
aliquot).
The point is, all Individual instances are well-defined physical objects (or
well-defined sets of physical objects), and they can be arranged in a
n-tiered hierarchy.
Moreover, each Individual that can be characterized as a "sample" (what we
refer to as a "CollectionObject") may also have a property value for
"CollectionOccurrenceID" -- which refers to the specific Occurrence instance
at which the sample was obtained.
So, for example, if the tree is visited on May 27, 2013 and a specimen
(sample) is taken, then:
1) An Event instance is generated to represent the event where the tree was
visited;
2) An Occurrence instance is generated, which refers to the new EventID, and
the existing IndividualID for the whole tree, and includes whatever other
Occurrence properties are relevant for the tree at the time of this
Occurrence
3) An Individual instance is generated for the specimen, which has a
property value for parentIndividualID that refers to the individualID for
the whole tree, and a property value for collectionOccurrenceID that refers
the Occurrence instance where the specimen was collected.
So, to summarize the answer to your question:
- There are multiple Occurrence instances that refer to the same Individual
instance representing the whole tree (and, hence can be collapsed to the
same IndividualID value).
- Any Individual can have derivatives that are themselves unique Individual
instances.
- Individuals are arranged hierarchically, and certain properties can be
inherited up or down the hierarchy, depending on the properties and their
associated logical constraints.
At some point, I will assemble a set of other specific use cases, and how we
manage them through our use of the "Individual" instance (although I will
probably not use the word "Individual", as this seems to cause too much
confusion in these discussions).
Aloha,
Rich
--
John Deck
(541) 321-0689 <tel:%28541%29%20321-0689>
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Evidence/Token Class [was: New Darwin Core terms proposed relating to material samples]
by Richard Pyle 27 May '13
by Richard Pyle 27 May '13
27 May '13
Thanks, Dan. I changed the subject line because I think your comment:
> tissue converted to DNA extract is still tissue (the tissue is still
> "material sample" after "destructive sampling", and still part of
> the event, just as is a photograph of the beast in the museum.
Relates to part of what Steve wrote:
> We defined a class for evidence, but we also considered not having
evidence
> being an explicit class. Not defining an explicit Token class would have
simplified
> the diagram at the bottom of the page - one could just say that there
should be
> evidence and it should be linked to the resource it documents.
> Token and THeE/IndividualOrganism are not disjoint classes - the physical
entity
> can be the evidence if somebody "owns" it and makes it available for
people to examine.
> However, in DSW, Token and THeE are not synonymous because we allow
evidence
> to include things that are not physically derived from the entity (e.g.
images, sounds,
> string data records) in addition to physical specimens.
This is an area that at first seems subtle, but once we actually started
working with data, starts to became more and more intuitive (at least to me,
anyway).
I first started thinking about this seriously during a 2007 meeting of ICZN
Commissioners, when we were contemplating the question of what could/should,
and what could/should not, fulfill the role of a type specimen under the
ICZN Code.
Needless to say, we did not come up with a complete answer to the question,
but the discussion did help frame in my mind the question in much better
detail.
Under the ICZN Code (which differs in a few respects from the ICNafp Code in
this area), the definition of a type specimen s fairly straight-forward:
1) It must be biological material. An image (e.g., illustration or
photograph) cannot be a type specimen (I believe the ICNafp accommodates
"iconotypes"). Rather, the organism depicted in an image is regarded as
being the type specimen.
2) A type specimen consists of the entire organism. For example, in the case
of a mammal that is captured and separated into its fur, skeleton,
alcoholic-preserved tissues, and tissue samples for DNA analysis, all of
these things together constitute the type specimen. In other words, the
whole specimen is the type. This is in contrast to ICNafp, where a single
specimen from a tree (for example) is the type, whereas other specimens
taken from the same tree are isotypes, and the remainder of the tree is not
a type at all.
3) It is understood that the community of organisms inhabiting a type
specimen (e.g., parasites and commensals) do not form part of the type
specimen.
There are other issues as well (especially for ichnotaxa, colonies, and
other specific cases), but the general point is that under the ICZN Code, a
type specimen consists of the sum of all cells that contain the same DNA
material that were part of the same biological individual (i.e., identical
twins, clones, and parthenogenic and other asexually reproducing organisms
potentially contain the same DNA material, but are different "individuals").
Most of the above is pretty straight-forward. Where it gets a bit squishy
is when you go down below the "tissue sample" level into smaller and smaller
subunits.
Can a single cell containing intact DNA be a type specimen for a
multicellular organism?
Can a single DNA molecule be a type specimen?
Can a single chromosome be a type specimen?
Can a PCR product be a type specimen?
...you can add as many hair-splitting examples as you wish.
Conversations like this let me to draw a distinction between matter that is
actually from an organism, vs. stuff that is representative of the organism
but lacks any material connection to the organism.
Coming back to Dan Janzen's comment; I would conclude that most things that
would full under the term "materialSample" include actually matter from a
biological organism. A PCR product is borderline, because it presumably
does contain actual matter from the organism, but the vast majority of
matter in the PCR product was not from the organism. Once you lose all the
matter from the organism, you are no longer talking about the "individual",
but instead are now talking about "Evidence of the Individual". This
applies to images of the individual (whether taken in-situ, or in a lab),
DNA "sequences" (rendered as text), images of the results of DNA sequencing
analysis (in various forms), and various other non-biological derivatives.
So, this leads me to the comment from Steve about "Evidence" (which, if I
understand correctly, is conceptually the same as the DSW "Token":
https://code.google.com/p/darwin-sw/wiki/ClassToken). In our model, a
specimen is *not* a Token or Evidence -- it is an individual. This has
proven (in my mind at least -- Rob W. still has reservations) to be a MUCH
more practical way to think of, and manage data for, specimens.
This email will be WAY too long if I try to explain all the subtleties of
this, so I'll just leave it at that. But clearly there are some differences
between our notion of "Evidence", and the DSW concept of "Token" -- although
both seem to be intended to solve the same problem.
Enough for now....
Aloha,
Rich
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Forwarding relevant opportunity announcement from South Africa.
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From: Gloria Cupido <G.Cupido(a)sanbi.org.za>
Date: Wed, May 8, 2013 at 5:17 AM
Subject: SANBI Post Doctoral Fellowships
To: Paula Hathorn <P.Hathorn(a)sanbi.org.za>
Dear all ****
** **
Please see on the SANBI website adverts for the two biodiversity
informatics post doctoral fellowships based at the University of the
Western Cape
http://www.sanbi.org/jobs/post-doctoral-fellowship-interrogation-biodiversi…
http://www.sanbi.org/jobs/post-doctoral-fellowship****
** **
Please circulate these adverts to potential candidates who will add value
to the programme we are establishing.****
** **
Kind regards****
** **
Paula****
** **
** **
Paula Hathorn****
Learning Network Manager****
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Tel: +27 21 799 8885****
Cell: +27 82 2608584****
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