- From: Martin Hepp <mfhepp@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 8 Dec 2010 16:10:31 +0100
- To: Daniel Schwabe <dschwabe@inf.puc-rio.br>
- Cc: public-lod@w3.org, Semantic Web <semantic-web@w3.org>
Hi Daniel, Yes, counting triples is likely a bad metric, because it may be biased by a lot of data landfill from a single source. Also, counting resources is not much better, for the same reasons. The number of publishers should be definitely part of such a formula, because that indicates someone was willing to spend time adopting the ontology. I assume that the final metric will be a complex formula, and determining the parameters for calibrating the factors would likely make for a good PhD topic ;-) Martin On 04.12.2010, at 19:52, Daniel Schwabe wrote: > Martin's message raises an interesting question, to which I don't > have an easy answer... > On Dec 4, 2010, at 11:07 - 04/12/10, Martin Hepp wrote: > >> Simple rules: >> >> 1. It is better to use an existing ontology than inventing your own. >> 2. It is better to use the most popular existing ontology than a >> less popular existing ontology. > Let's assume I like this rule and want to follow it. > How can we measure the popularity of an ontology? Simply counting > the number of triples in the LoD cloud that have a URI from it? > The problem with this, in my view, is that measuring a single > "term" (class, property) is not really indicative. As many people > mix and match terms from different ontologies, the popularity of a > single (or small subset) of terms may not be a good indicator of the > popularity of the *whole* ontology (when you would really benefit > from the ontology engineering effort put into it, as pointed out by > others). > I'd love to hear different takes on this. > *If* we can come up with a good metric, this could be reported in > existing directories/lists, and help users tremendously (although I > can also see another can of worms opening up, but I won't go into > this for now). > > > Cheers > Daniel > --- > Daniel Schwabe Dept. de Informatica, PUC-Rio > Tel:+55-21-3527 1500 r. 4356 R. M. de S. Vicente, 225<br> > Fax: +55-21-3527 1530 Rio de Janeiro, RJ 22453-900, > Brasil > http://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~dschwabe > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------- martin hepp e-business & web science research group universitaet der bundeswehr muenchen e-mail: hepp@ebusiness-unibw.org phone: +49-(0)89-6004-4217 fax: +49-(0)89-6004-4620 www: http://www.unibw.de/ebusiness/ (group) http://www.heppnetz.de/ (personal) skype: mfhepp twitter: mfhepp Check out GoodRelations for E-Commerce on the Web of Linked Data! ================================================================= * Project Main Page: http://purl.org/goodrelations/ * Quickstart Guide for Developers: http://bit.ly/quickstart4gr * Vocabulary Reference: http://purl.org/goodrelations/v1 * Developer's Wiki: http://www.ebusiness-unibw.org/wiki/GoodRelations * Examples: http://bit.ly/cookbook4gr * Presentations: http://bit.ly/grtalks * Videos: http://bit.ly/grvideos
Received on Wednesday, 8 December 2010 15:13:44 UTC