Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Ontology Summit 2014 Kicks Off Tomorrow, Jan 16

The topic for this year's Summit is "Big Data and Semantic Web Meet Applied Ontology". The Summit kicks off with a conference call on Thursday, January 16th, at 9:30am PST/12:30pm EST/5:30pm GMT (call details). Here is a short excerpt from the Summit's "Goals and Objectives":
Since the beginnings of the Semantic Web, ontologies have played key roles in the design and deployment of new semantic technologies. Yet over the years, the level of collaboration between the Semantic Web and Applied Ontology communities has been much less than expected. Within Big Data applications, ontologies appear to have had little impact. This year's Ontology Summit is an opportunity for building bridges between the Semantic Web, Linked Data, Big Data, and Applied Ontology communities.
For those of you not familiar with the Summit, it was started in 2006, and there is a different theme each year. It is sponsored by a set of organizations including NIST, Ontolog, NCOR, NCBO, IAOA & NITRD. The way that the Summit works is by a series of conference calls (every Thursday) and lots of email discussion. It is culminated by a face-to-face meeting in late April.

I highly recommend participating, or even just lurking. It is not necessary (or even possible :-) to attend the call every week and to read every email on the ontolog-forum. (Also, it is not mandatory to come to the face-to-face.) If you have to miss something, slides and transcripts of the conference chats, as well as an email archive, are available online. In addition, at the end of the Summit, a "communique" is prepared that summarizes the discussions and work.

I have lurked on the edges of the Summit since the late 2000s, but finally have the time to actively participate. This year, I am co-championing Track A on "Common, Reusable Semantic Content". This topic is near and dear to my heart since I am a strong proponent of reuse. IMHO, it is always valuable (when it is possible) to build on someone else's good work, and benefit from their learnings, rather than starting from scratch. So, when modeling or designing, I look to find something similar and then extrapolate from, or build on it.

Needless to say, I usually don't take other ontologies "en masse", but pick and choose the semantics, patterns or ideas that make sense. How to do this is one aspect of Track A, and there is more. Here are some excerpts from our "Mission" statement:

Semantic technologies such as ontologies and reasoning play a major role in the Semantic Web and are increasingly being applied to help process and understand information expressed in digital formats. Indeed, the derivation of assured knowledge from the connection of diverse (and linked) data is one of the main themes of Big Data ... One challenge in these efforts is to build and leverage common semantic content thus reducing the burden of new ontology creation while avoiding silos of different ontologies. Examples of such content are whole or partial ontologies, ontology modules, ontological patterns and archetypes, and common theories related to ontologies and their fit to the real world ... Achieving commonality and reuse in a timely manner and with manageable resources remain key ingredients for practical development of quality and interoperable ontologies ... This track will discuss the reuse problem and explore possible solutions. Among these are practical issues like the use of ontology repositories and tools, and the possibility of using basic and common semantic content in smaller, more accessible pieces. The goal is to identify exemplary content and also define the related information to enable use/reuse in semantic applications and services. A secondary goal is to highlight where more work is needed and enable the applied ontology community to further develop semantic content and its related information.
I hope that you can join me!

Andrea

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