228 research outputs found
An evolutionary approach to Function
The distinction between function and role is a vexed and difficult one. While the distinction appears to be useful, in practice it is hard to apply; this can be even worse when applying this distinction to biology. In this paper, I take an evolutionary approach, considering a series of examples, to develop and generate definitions for these concepts. I test them in practice against work performed on the Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI). Finally, I give an axiomatisation and discuss methods for applying these definitions in practice
An evolutionary approach to Function
Background: Understanding the distinction between function and role is vexing
and difficult. While it appears to be useful, in practice this distinction is
hard to apply, particularly within biology.
Results: I take an evolutionary approach, considering a series of examples,
to develop and generate definitions for these concepts. I test them in practice
against the Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI). Finally, I give an
axiomatisation and discuss methods for applying these definitions in practice.
Conclusions: The definitions in this paper are applicable, formalizing
current practice. As such, they make a significant contribution to the use of
these concepts within biomedical ontologies
Identitas: A Better Way To Be Meaningless
It is often recommended that identifiers for ontology terms should be
semantics-free or meaningless. In practice, ontology developers tend to use
numeric identifiers, starting at 1 and working upwards. In this paper we
present a critique of current ontology semantics-free identifiers;
monotonically increasing numbers have a number of significant usability flaws
which make them unsuitable as a default option, and we present a series of
alternatives. We have provide an implementation of these alternatives which can
be freely combined.Comment: 2 pages, accepted at ICBO 201
Facets, Tiers and Gems: Ontology Patterns for Hypernormalisation
There are many methodologies and techniques for easing the task of ontology
building. Here we describe the intersection of two of these: ontology
normalisation and fully programmatic ontology development. The first of these
describes a standardized organisation for an ontology, with singly inherited
self-standing entities, and a number of small taxonomies of refining entities.
The former are described and defined in terms of the latter and used to manage
the polyhierarchy of the self-standing entities. Fully programmatic development
is a technique where an ontology is developed using a domain-specific language
within a programming language, meaning that as well defining ontological
entities, it is possible to add arbitrary patterns or new syntax within the
same environment. We describe how new patterns can be used to enable a new
style of ontology development that we call hypernormalisation
User and Developer Interaction with Editable and Readable Ontologies
The process of building ontologies is a difficult task that involves
collaboration between ontology developers and domain experts and requires an
ongoing interaction between them. This collaboration is made more difficult,
because they tend to use different tool sets, which can hamper this
interaction. In this paper, we propose to decrease this distance between domain
experts and ontology developers by creating more readable forms of ontologies,
and further to enable editing in normal office environments. Building on a
programmatic ontology development environment, such as Tawny-OWL, we are now
able to generate these readable/editable from the raw ontological source and
its embedded comments. We have this translation to HTML for reading; this
environment provides rich hyperlinking as well as active features such as
hiding the source code in favour of comments. We are now working on translation
to a Word document that also enables editing. Taken together this should
provide a significant new route for collaboration between the ontologist and
domain specialist.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted at ICBO 2017, License update
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