The draft for Automotive Ontology Community Group Charter [via Automotive Ontology Community Group]

Automotive Ontology Community Group Charter
 The aim of the W3C Automotive Ontology Community Group is facilitate the
development of web ontologies that define and describe the shared conceptual
structures in the automotive industry. The first step in this development, the
automotive extension proposal for schema.org is now in the process of
finalization – the most important properties and classes have become the part
of schema.org 2.0 core on May 13, 2015. The finalization of the auto.schema.org
(“reviewed/hosted”) extension is expected very soon. The scope of the first
set of concepts, those in core and in the auto.schema.org includes terms that
describes vehicles from the sales or automotive market perspective.

Using this baseline scope, the community group intends to grow the automotive
ontologies both horizontally – by adding new important types and properties
related to the market perception of autos, essentially amending the
auto.schema.org, and vertically – by adding other types and properties
describing other aspects of cars, such as vehicle configuration and
“buildability” aspect, vehicle lifetime aspects, or vehicle data backbone
aspects - covering the new realities of “connected cars”, autonomous cars
etc.

The open source ontology (or ontologies) to be developed, have inherited the
code name GAO – Generic Automotive Ontology (and its URI: http://purl.org/gao)
from the informal group of individuals and corporations that worked on it since
the fall of 2013.

The ontologies developed in this work may be voted on by its members to be
included into future evolutions of auto.schema.org extension, external
extensions or become subject of standardization efforts with relevant
standardization bodies.

The solutions developed in this group may be voted on by its membership via
decision-making approaches described by W3C, IETF, or similar standardization
bodies.

The charter can be revised by the consensus of the Community Group. The key
considerations are:

 The overall goal of GAO, including the selection and balance between initially
proposed aspects of automotive industry to be reflected in GAO ontologies.
 The scope of work
 Deliveries and roadmap
 Dependencies and liaisons
 Community Group processes (including tools)

Overall goals of GAO
The fundamental goal of the GAO ontology (or family of ontologies) is to create
a common conceptual framework for information sharing and data exchange for the
benefit of the automotive industry and the benefit of industries related to the
automotive industry, including but not limited to: insurance industry, media and
marketing industry, transportation infrastructure industry (road systems) etc.

To achieve this goal the community will:

 Clearly define the key components of GAO, initially including:
a) GAO Compatibility: A schema.org-compliant ontology for vehicle configuration
information.
b) GAO Vehicle Lifetime Information: A schema.org-compliant ontology for vehicle
life-time information.
c) GAO Vehicle Data Backbone: An ontology for information interchange within a
vehicle, between vehicles, and between vehicles and their external entities. The
community may propose different set of key components for GAO or add new
components.
 Collect and describe the use cases of the GAO ontologies
 Review the existing schema.org extensions (core and auto.schema.org)
 Review existing standards, publically available taxonomies and vocabularies
 Propose the amendment of auto.schema.org
 Build the prototypes of respective GAO ontologies
 Submit the proposals of subsets of respective GAO ontologies to auto.schema.org
extension.
 Develop materials describing the ontologies
 Develop set of implementation recommendations for future users of GAO
ontologies
 Identify opportunities for creating broad adoption of GAO ontologies
 Engage the developer community to use GAO ontologies in the software

Roadmap
The following initial roadmap has been envisioned and shall be discussed in the
first community group teleconferences. This roadmap contains milestones from the
work inception to the delivery of GAO prototypes, and covers time span from July
2015 to March 2016. The further works will be defined at the end of this
period.

 The first teleconference – initial plan for week 29 (July 13-17, 2015) –
final details to be agreed
 Review of existing schema.org extensions – September 2015
 Review of existing standards – September 2015
 Definition of the key components of GAO – October 2015
 Collection of GAO use cases – November 2015
 Creation of the first GAO prototypes – February 2016
 Creation of the final report – March 2016

Scope of Work
This section contains a brief overview of the works planned in the roadmap
Review of the existing schema.org extension
The team that proposed the existing schema.org extension, with possible
participation of the schema.org team members will present the existing
extension, their motivations and decisions and will open the discussion about
the potential changes and additions to the extension. As the result of these
actions, an amendment proposal may be presented by the community to the
schema.org team.
Review of existing standards
The members of the community will present existing standards related to scope of
GAO. The standards may include but will not be limited to lexicons of standards
like ISO-10303 STEP AP 214[1], existing ontologies like Vehicle Sales Ontology
– VSO[2] , Car Options Ontology – COO[3], Volkswagen Vehicle Ontology –
VVO[4], Used Cars Ontology – UCO[5] or 'Configuration as Linked Data'
ontology[6] etc. To broaden the scope of existing standards the community
members will appoint the other known standards and ontologies relevant for GAO.
Definition of the key components of GAO
The community will discuss and decide about the scope of the component of GAO
ontologies. The ideas underlying the initially proposed components (described in
this document in the “Overall Goals of GAO” section 1.a-c) will be discussed
and agreed upon or modified. Possible other components will be added.
Collection of GAO use cases
 The community members will collect the real and possible use cases of GAO
ontologies. The real use cases may contain existing implementations of
schema.org extensions developed in the framework of GAO. The future use cases
will form a kind of “thought experiments” helping to shape the GAO
components.
 Creation of the first GAO prototypes
Selected community members of some appointed third party will build GAO
prototypes (as OWL ontologies, serialized as Turtle and JSON-LD) accompanied by
appropriate visualizations to help in the presentation of the prototypes. For
schema.org extension amendments the canonical representation will be used
(RDFa).
Final report
The final report of the currently planned works will be created and submitted by
the community group chair and submitted to W3C after all corrections and
community-wide discussion.
Future works
The intention of GAO community is to continue the work beyond GAO prototypes.
The respective new goals and the scope of work will be formulated after the
final report submission.
Dependencies or Liaisons

We have identified the following projects/initiatives relevant to the scope of
GAO:

 W3C Automotive Working Group, which mission is to develop Open Web Platform
specifications for developers writing applications for in-vehicle infotainment
systems and vehicle data access protocols.
 Automotive and Web Platform Business Group, which mission is to influence the
Open Web Platform on the unique needs of the automotive industry, and to help
stakeholders within the automotive industry to build a good and practical
understanding on the standardization processes within the W3C.
 AutoAlliance, The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers (Auto Alliance) calls
itself “the voice for a united auto industry”. They promote sustainable
mobility and benefit society in the areas of environment, energy and motor
vehicle safety.
 Automotive Industry Action Group - AIAG - is a not-for-profit association where
professionals from a diverse group of stakeholders – including retailers,
suppliers of all sizes, automakers, manufacturers, service providers, academia,
and government – work collaboratively to streamline industry processes via
global standards development & harmonized business practices.
 The European Automobile Manufacturers' Association – ACEA - represents the 15
Europe-based car, van, truck and bus makers. ACEA works with a variety of
institutional, non-governmental, research and civil society partners - as well
as with a number of industry associations with related interests.

Community and Business Group Process

Anything in this charter that conflicts with requirements of the Community and
Business Group Process is void.

Choosing a Chair

This group chooses their Chair(s) and can replace the Chair(s) at any time using
whatever means they prefer. However, if 5 participants – no two from the same
organization – call for an election, the group must use the following process
to replace any current Chair(s) with a new Chair, consulting the Community
Development Lead on election operations (e.g., voting infrastructure and using
RFC 2777).

Participants announce their candidacies. Participants have 14 days to announce
their candidacies, but this period ends as soon as all participants have
announced their intentions. If there is only one candidate, that person becomes
the Chair. If there are two or more candidates, there is a vote. Otherwise,
nothing changes.

Participants vote. Participants have 21 days to vote for a single candidate, but
this period ends as soon as all participants have voted. The individual who
receives the most votes – no two from the same organization – is elected
chair. In case of a tie, RFC2777 is used to break the tie. An elected Chair may
appoint co-Chairs.

Participants dissatisfied with the outcome of an election may ask the Community
Development Lead to intervene. The Community Development Lead, after evaluating
the election, may take any action including no action.

Decision process

This group will seek to make decisions when there is consensus. When the group
discusses an issue on the mailing list and there is a call from the group for
assessing consensus, after due consideration of different opinions, the Chair
should record a decision and any objections.

Participants may call for an online vote if they feel the Chair has not
accurately determined the consensus of the group or if the Chair refuses to
assess consensus. The call for a vote must specify the duration of the vote
which must be at least 7 days and should be no more than 14 days. The Chair must
start the vote within 7 days of the request. The decision will be based on the
majority of the ballots cast.

It is the Chair’s responsibility to ensure that the decision process is fair,
respects the consensus of the CG, and does not unreasonably favor or
discriminate against any group participant or their employer.

Transparency

The group will conduct all of its technical work on its public mailing list. Any
decisions reached at any meeting are tentative and must be confirmed on the mail
list.

Amendments to this Charter

The group can decide to work on a proposed amended charter, editing the text
using the Decision Process described above. The decision on whether to adopt the
amended charter is made by conducting a 30-day vote on the proposed new charter.
The new charter, if approved, takes effect on either the proposed date in the
charter itself, or 7 days after the result of the election is announced,
whichever is later. A new charter must receive 2/3 of the votes cast in the
approval vote to pass.

The group may make simple corrections to the charter such as deliverable dates
by the simpler group decision process rather than this charter amendment
process. The group will use the amendment process for any substantive changes to
the goals, scope, deliverables, decision process or rules for amending the
charter.

Charter's Revisions:

 June 16, 2015 @ 14.30 [Current Revision] by Mirek Sopek

References:

[1]
http://www.iso.org/iso/home/store/catalogue_ics/catalogue_detail_ics.htm?csnumber=38727

[2] http://www.heppnetz.de/ontologies/vso/ns

[3] http://www.volkswagen.co.uk/vocabularies/coo/ns

[4] http://www.volkswagen.co.uk/vocabularies/vvo/ns

[5] http://ontologies.makolab.com/uco/ns.html

[6] http://purl.org/configurationontology



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Received on Monday, 29 June 2015 01:40:40 UTC