- From: Randall Leeds <randall@bleeds.info>
- Date: Wed, 18 Mar 2015 18:40:38 +0000
- To: Jacob Jett <jjett2@illinois.edu>, "Denenberg, Ray" <rden@loc.gov>
- Cc: Web Annotation <public-annotation@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAAL6JQh2Eoy80kyCGYrgZqyDYpUp9zWCtReFfKGnDZiOBPaQtA@mail.gmail.com>
More or less +1 to Jacob. Other concerns are the open world problem of assigning motivations to the body, which may be a resource owned by a different authority than the annotation and a semantic issue that the motivation is really a motivation for involving the body in the annotation activity rather than a motivation for the existence of the body resource itself. It seems like the most conceptually sound way to handle it would be to have an intermediate resource. That definitely complicates the model. I think it was suggested in GitHub that perhaps even if the bodies have different purposes the annotation itself has a primary, over-arching motivation and if it seems like there are multiple perhaps multiple annotations is more appropriate. On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 11:12 AM Jacob Jett <jjett2@illinois.edu> wrote: > Hi Ray, > > My question would be, are we conflating motivation with structural > implications? That a thing is a tag seems to me to say more about its > intrinsic nature, i.e., a tag is a sort snippet of text, a semantic tag is > a named entity, rather than the role it plays in the annotation. That being > said I do think that there is likely room in the model for a motivation (or > more properly a role) property on the body. > > We may want to be cautious here because there will likely be cases where > the role a body plays in an annotation is sensitive to the environment the > annotation finds itself in. In some environments some text might be > explaining the target and in others it might be describing it. Since the > model is extensible it might be best to leave it to individual communities > to develop value added extensions particular to their annotation > repositories rather than try to develop an over-arching taxonomy of body > types that will likely be incomplete. > > Regards, > > Jacob > > _____________________________________________________ > Jacob Jett > Research Assistant > Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship > The Graduate School of Library and Information Science > University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign > 501 E. Daniel Street, MC-493, Champaign, IL 61820-6211 USA > (217) 244-2164 > jjett2@illinois.edu > > _____________________________________________________ > Jacob Jett > Research Assistant > Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship > The Graduate School of Library and Information Science > University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign > 501 E. Daniel Street, MC-493, Champaign, IL 61820-6211 USA > (217) 244-2164 > jjett2@illinois.edu > > On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 12:55 PM, Denenberg, Ray <rden@loc.gov> wrote: > >> We ran out of time while I was on-Q so I’ll carry my thoughts to email. >> >> >> >> The issue is multiple bodies with multiple motivations. In the model >> currently, a motivation, applies to the entire annotation. How do you >> associate a motivation with a body. >> >> >> >> It seems to me that a straightforward approach is for each body to have a >> class (with implied motivation). Someone mentioned, if it’s a tag, you >> know it’s a tag. If it’s a sematic tag, you know it’s a semantic tag. How >> do you know? Because the body is classed as oa:Tag or oa:SemanticTag. So >> it works for those two, why wouldn’t that work in general? >> >> >> >> Ray >> > >
Received on Wednesday, 18 March 2015 18:41:07 UTC