- From: Kingsley Idehen <kidehen@openlinksw.com>
- Date: Thu, 6 Jul 2017 16:48:13 -0400
- To: Paul Houle <paul.houle@ontology2.com>, 'semantic-web at W3C' <semantic-web@w3c.org>, 'public-lod' <public-lod@w3.org>, 'DBpedia' <Dbpedia-discussion@lists.sourceforge.net>
- Message-ID: <0acbd8b0-f15a-1d8a-60de-a297983cf757@openlinksw.com>
On 7/6/17 11:02 AM, Paul Houle wrote: > I would disagree. > > The DBpedia Ontology is not designed to support any specific kind of > reasoning. That's a bit of an over generalization, don't you think? Here's a simple ontology exploration example via the following steps: 1. Goto http://dbpedia.org/fct/ 2. Type in http://schema.org/Person . At this juncture you have all instances of schema:Person class as per the document at: http://dbpedia.org/describe/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fschema.org%2FPerson&urilookup=1 Jump to the last page i.e., goto: http://dbpedia.org/describe/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fschema.org%2FPerson&distinct=1&p=1&lp=12434&op=-1&last=&gp=1 In a nutshell, there are some ontological (tbox) relations in place (e.g., owl:equivalentClass, rdfs:subClassOf etc..) that are useful for reasoning and inference. Kingsley > > What it *is* designed to do is capture the somewhat structured data > that exists in Wikipedia. Following the much misunderstood "semantic > web", the emphasis is on properties first, and then classes second. > Think of it as a set of baseball or Pokemon cards; the point is not > to replicate or even closely describe the performance or rules of the > game, but to go after the long hanging fruit of "things that are easy > to ontologize." > > There is a real price to pay for this; from the viewpoint of > conventional application development and introductory computer > science, the data is not always factually correct or satisfies the > invariants required for a particular algorithm. Practically that > means that you might ask for "US States" and get 48 or 51, that > somebody like Barry Bonds or Mel Gibson has their career much better > represented than J. Edgar Hoover or J. Eric S. Thompson, and you > would probably find that the "tree of life" in DBpedia is not really a > tree. > > If you need to reasoning in some domain you need to find some area you > are willing to pump the entropy out of, create the data structures > appropriate for what you want to do, and possibly incorporate data > from DBpedia, doing whatever cleanup is necessary. That's not > different at all from the situation of "doing reasoning over reasoning > over data collected by a large organization". > > > > ------ Original Message ------ > From: "John Flynn" <jflynn12@verizon.net <mailto:jflynn12@verizon.net>> > To: "'Sebastian Hellmann'" <hellmann@informatik.uni-leipzig.de > <mailto:hellmann@informatik.uni-leipzig.de>>; "'semantic-web at W3C'" > <semantic-web@w3c.org <mailto:semantic-web@w3c.org>>; "'public-lod'" > <public-lod@w3.org <mailto:public-lod@w3.org>>; "'DBpedia'" > <Dbpedia-discussion@lists.sourceforge.net > <mailto:Dbpedia-discussion@lists.sourceforge.net>> > Sent: 7/5/2017 11:43:02 AM > Subject: Re: [DBpedia-discussion] Call for Ontology Editor demos for > DBpedia > >> I have long been curious about the DBpedia ontology structure so I >> just took a look at the ontology represented in >> (https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/375401/dbo_no_mappings..nt >> <https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/375401/dbo_no_mappings.nt>) as >> referenced in the email below. >> >> I normally start the evaluation of an ontology by looking at the >> top-down class relationships. So, I did a search for the classes that >> were listed as a direct subclass of owl#Thing to get a general idea >> of the organization of the DBpedia class structure. >> >> To say the least, I was sorely disappointed. Here are a few of the >> DBpedia classes that are direct subclasses of owl#Thing: Food, Media, >> Work, Blazon, Altitude, Language, Currency, Statistic, Diploma, >> Award, Agent, PublicService, Disease, GrossDomesticProdutPerCapita, >> ElectionDiagram, Demographics, Relationship, Medicine, List, >> BioMolecule. I gave up after this small sample. It is obvious that >> the DBpedia community needs to worry a lot more about the structure >> of the ontology itself rather than focusing on selecting a new >> editor. A working group needs to be established to go back to the >> drawing board and look at the DBpedia ontology form the top down. It >> certainly doesn't make much sense as it is currently structured. >> >> >> >> John Flynn >> >> http://semanticsimulations.com >> >> >> >> *From:*Sebastian Hellmann [mailto:hellmann@informatik.uni-leipzig.de >> <mailto:hellmann@informatik.uni-leipzig.de>] >> *Sent:* Wednesday, July 05, 2017 10:43 AM >> *To:* 'semantic-web at W3C'; public-lod; DBpedia >> *Subject:* [DBpedia-discussion] Call for Ontology Editor demos for >> DBpedia >> >> >> >> Dear all, >> >> we are preparing a switch from the mappings wiki >> (http://mappings.dbpedia.org) to another ontology editor and started >> to collect requirements/tools here: >> >> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1HwtJJ3jIlrQAPwHYhvpw4a4Z4hZorTGaZTB8Bq8Y-TI/edit >> >> We already have a demo for Webprotege thanks to Ismael Rodriguez, our >> GSoC student. As we are lacking time and resources, we will probably >> only consider editors with a running demo, so the community can try it. >> >> Our main interest is of course to manage the DBpedia core ontology >> and push any mappings to other ontologies in separate files. So we >> provide a core version for demo purposes created with: >> rapper -g dbpedia_2016-10.nt | grep -v >> '\(http://schema.org\|http://www.wikidata.org\|http://www.ontologydesignpatterns.org\ >> <http://schema.org/%7Chttp:/www.wikidata.org/%7Chttp:/www..ontologydesignpatterns.org/>)' >> > dbo_no_mappings.nt >> >> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/375401/dbo_no_mappings.nt >> (I hope that the regex didn't kick out anything essential or broke >> any axioms...) >> >> We would be very happy, if anyone from the semantic web community >> would make a demo with their favorite editor and add a link to the >> Google Doc and post a short message on the DBpedia discussion list[1] >> or on slack https://dbpedia.slack.com/ . >> >> This would help us to make a more informed decision. The next DBpedia >> Dev online meeting will be on 2nd of August 14:00 (each first >> Wednesday per month). Presentations of editors are also welcome. We >> will also discuss the editor question during the DBpedia meeting in >> Amsterdam, co-located with SEMANTiCS on 14.9. >> http://wiki.dbpedia.org/meetings/Amsterdam2017 >> >> Thank you for your help! >> >> [1] https://sourceforge.net/projects/dbpedia/lists/dbpedia-discussion >> >> -- >> All the best, >> Sebastian Hellmann >> >> Director of Knowledge Integration and Linked Data Technologies (KILT) >> Competence Center >> at the Institute for Applied Informatics (InfAI) at Leipzig University >> Executive Director of the DBpedia Association >> Projects: http://dbpedia.org, http://nlp2rdf.org, >> http://linguistics..okfn.org <http://linguistics.okfn.org>, >> https://www.w3..org/community/ld4lt <http://www.w3.org/community/ld4lt> >> Homepage: http://aksw.org/SebastianHellmann >> Research Group: http://aksw.org >> -- Regards, Kingsley Idehen Founder & CEO OpenLink Software (Home Page: http://www.openlinksw.com) Weblogs (Blogs): Legacy Blog: http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/ Blogspot Blog: http://kidehen.blogspot.com Medium Blog: https://medium.com/@kidehen Profile Pages: Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/kidehen/ Quora: https://www.quora.com/profile/Kingsley-Uyi-Idehen Twitter: https://twitter.com/kidehen Google+: https://plus.google.com/+KingsleyIdehen/about LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/kidehen Web Identities (WebID): Personal: http://kingsley.idehen.net/public_home/kidehen/profile.ttl#i : http://id.myopenlink.net/DAV/home/KingsleyUyiIdehen/Public/kingsley.ttl#this
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Received on Thursday, 6 July 2017 20:48:50 UTC