Re: Knowledge representation and Disease Control frameworks using AI, KRIDs

Milton

For perusal   V1 AI KRID Core Ontology

Carl Mattocks
AIKRCG co-chair

It was a pleasure to clarify


On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 11:53 AM carl mattocks <carlmattocks@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Milton:
>
> Regarding 'KRID can be defined in unique Categories'
>
> I believe our experiments should leverage Ranganathan's Prolegomena
> (Library Classification) canons /  basic rules for classification schemes
> https://www.miskatonic.org/library/prolegomena.html
>
> cheers
> carl
>
> It was a pleasure to clarify
>
>
> On Tue, May 26, 2020 at 8:20 AM carl mattocks <carlmattocks@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Milton
>>
>> Thanks for affirming :
>> So in a strict sense of formalized representation for protocols you could
>> say that declarative and imperative (procedural)  knowledge would cover
>> protocols.
>>
>> To help us consider how best to approach the use-case - please share the
>> section of the diagram focused on PROTOCOL
>>
>> thanks
>> Carl
>> It was a pleasure to clarify
>>
>>
>> On Tue, May 26, 2020 at 1:08 AM ProjectParadigm-ICT-Program <
>> metadataportals@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Carl,
>>>
>>> I took the liberty of checking the types of knowledge in philosophy, and
>>> found a very useful page that covers 14 types of knowledge.
>>>
>>> See:
>>> 14 Types of Knowledge (Updated 2020) | Helpful Professor
>>> <https://helpfulprofessor.com/types-of-knowledge/>
>>>
>>> 14 Types of Knowledge (Updated 2020) | Helpful Professor
>>>
>>> Knowledge is "stored facts". All humans are capable of the storage of
>>> facts or information for retrieval at a la...
>>> <https://helpfulprofessor.com/types-of-knowledge/>
>>> It will take (3) dispersed knowledge, (4) domain or expert knowledge,
>>> (5) empirical knowledge, (6) encoded knowledge, (10) imperative knowledge
>>> and (11) descriptive knowledge to cover all processes in the three
>>> generalized types of processes.
>>>
>>> Types (3) and (5) lead to (4) which leads to (6) and (11).
>>>
>>> So in a strict sense of formalized representation for protocols you
>>> could say that declarative and imperative (procedural)  knowledge would
>>> cover protocols.
>>>
>>> but the framework also covers processes that do not involve protocols.
>>>
>>> I am working on a diagram to make this explicit for the entirety of the
>>> disease control framework.
>>>
>>> regards
>>>
>>> Milton Ponson
>>> GSM: +297 747 8280
>>> PO Box 1154, Oranjestad
>>> Aruba, Dutch Caribbean
>>> Project Paradigm: Bringing the ICT tools for sustainable development to
>>> all stakeholders worldwide through collaborative research on applied
>>> mathematics, advanced modeling, software and standards development
>>>
>>>
>>> On Monday, May 25, 2020, 7:49:28 PM ADT, carl mattocks <
>>> carlmattocks@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Milton
>>>
>>> Thanks for sharing the insights gained from your ambitious plan - and
>>> the use-case 'for StratML utilized in AI, the KRID can be defined in unique
>>> Categories'.
>>> To help add more detail - do you consider that (all
>>> rules/syntax/workflow/ etc) defined as  'Protocol' can be made explicit
>>> with Declarative and/or Imperative Knowledge?
>>>
>>> cheers
>>> Carl
>>>
>>>
>>> It was a pleasure to clarify
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, May 25, 2020 at 4:47 PM ProjectParadigm-ICT-Program <
>>> metadataportals@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> As I indicated earlier I have embarked on the rather ambitious plan of
>>> writing an article, titled "A Smart City Framework for Disease Control
>>> Utilizing Sensor, Tracing, Tracking, Wearable and Medical Technologies".
>>>
>>> There are a couple of important factors to take into account. First and
>>> foremost real-time spatio-temporal modeling in a smart city setting, this
>>> closely mirrors cellular structures found in wireless networking. Second,
>>> there is the modeling of processes. This is done by defining all related
>>> systems for disease control as a "set of systems of complex adaptive
>>> systems". Now some of these are very similar yet in terms of data and
>>> information required slightly variable. Then there is the inevitable
>>> problem of reliability of data, and verification thereof. And finally how
>>> to structure the data to allow manipulation thereof, and how to model all
>>> of this mathematically.
>>>
>>> What is striking in all of this, is regardless of the complexity of this
>>> set of systems of complex adaptive systems, three things stand out. (1) the
>>> use of protocols which can be made explicit by flowchart diagram
>>> algorithms, (2) protocols can be made explicit in a strategic planning
>>> context and thus converted to (eGovernment) machine readable format, (3)
>>> the exchange of data and information between the myriad of components in
>>> the disease control system is driven by categories of protocols defined by
>>> generalized chain-linked processes with specific required outcomes.
>>>
>>> As I also indicated in a prior post, the groundbreaking book published
>>> by Oxford University Press, Introduction to the Theory of Complex Systems
>>> by Stefan Thurner, Rudolf Hanel and Peter Klimek, "the kaleidoscope of
>>> complex systems are best described by the rules that govern their
>>> interactions".
>>>
>>> The framework thus boils down to three generalized processes: (1)
>>> Prevention, (2) Mitigation, (3) Creation of Viral Loss-of-funtion.
>>>
>>> Using category theory to generalize interaction rules, cellular
>>> spatio-temporal modeling, equivalence of protocols, flowchart diagrams and
>>> programs, and chain-linking protocols using strategic planning for desired
>>> inputs and outcomes makes it possible to make sense of required data and
>>> desired information outcomes necessary at each stage of a process chain
>>> link.
>>>
>>> This makes a case for StratML utilized in AI, the KRID can be defined in
>>> unique Categories.
>>>
>>> So what I am getting at is that we are able to uniquely define knowledge
>>> representation NOT by the objects in play by the rules that govern their
>>> interactions which specify desired outcomes, be it in simple systems or in
>>> complex adaptive systems context
>>>
>>> And for this category theory is indispensable.
>>>
>>> Thus our efforts in AIKR StratML strategies are very worthwhile pursuing.
>>>
>>> regards
>>>
>>> Milton Ponson
>>> GSM: +297 747 8280
>>> PO Box 1154, Oranjestad
>>> Aruba, Dutch Caribbean
>>> Project Paradigm: Bringing the ICT tools for sustainable development to
>>> all stakeholders worldwide through collaborative research on applied
>>> mathematics, advanced modeling, software and standards development
>>>
>>>

Received on Wednesday, 3 June 2020 20:13:25 UTC