- From: James Cheney <jcheney@inf.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2012 12:36:25 +0100
- To: Graham Klyne <graham.klyne@zoo.ox.ac.uk>
- Cc: Luc Moreau <L.Moreau@ecs.soton.ac.uk>, ProvenanceWorking Group WG <public-prov-wg@w3.org>
On Apr 12, 2012, at 8:35 AM, Graham Klyne wrote: > On 12/04/2012 00:01, Luc Moreau wrote: >> Hi Graham >> Can you do without 'version', which carries its own meaning in the context of provenance? > > Yes... I wanted to avoid that, but couldn't think of another word that didn't beg even more questions. > >> Are you saying a description *is* a thing? Or denotes a thing. > > Neither. A description *describes* something; provides information about that something. > In the general context here, a provenance expression describes an entity, > hence also describes some aspect of a thing. > >> Also, what is the meaning for 'more specific thing'.? > > Ultimately, the formalization says it precisely. > My main concern is trying to avoid use/mention confusion in the informal text. > Actually, the formal semantics tries had *not* to try to answer too many questions like this! I'm realizing that by doing so, I've been hopscotching the central issue about the entity/thing description: I think the consensus is emerging that (cf Tim's comments also) entities are a *special things (or parts of things) that are well-behaved enough that we can describe* The semantics doesn't commit to this reading because I wasn't sure in working on it whether entities were *separate information about things* (informational reading), or whether the entity records are records that describe entities that are *particular aspects of things* (whole/part reading). The fact that (for a while) we were talking about specialization partly in terms of the attributes declared in the entity records made me think we were talking about information, but now it seems that the latter (whole/part) reading is closer to the consensus, and we need to explain this very carefully. Graham and others, are you happy with the following refinement: "alternateOf: To express when one Entity is an aspect of the same Thing as another Entity. " "specializationOf: To express when one of two alternate Entities encompasses more specific aspect(s) of the Thing they are both based on" > #g > -- > >> >> Professor Luc Moreau >> Electronics and Computer Science >> University of Southampton >> Southampton SO17 1BJ >> United Kingdom >> >> On 11 Apr 2012, at 15:14, "Graham Klyne"<graham.klyne@zoo.ox.ac.uk> wrote: >> >>> James, >>> >>> I think what you write here in response to Luc is just right. >>> >>> I also think that the point of Luc's previous question may be a reaction to some unfortunate phrasing, where you (were quoted to) say: >>> >>> "specializationOf_1: To express when one entity provides a more specific description of the same thing as another entity." >>> >>> I think this might be more precisely phrased as something like: >>> "specializationOf_1: To express when the description of one entity is a more specific version of the same thing as the description of another entity." >>> >>> I.e. to make it clear that is is not the entity itself that provides a description, but is described. >>> >>> (I also considered: "specializationOf_1: To express when the expression for one entity is a more specific description of the same thing as the expression for another entity." - but this introduces the notion of an expression for an entity, which I'm not sure is helpful.) >>> >>> #g >>> -- >>> >>> On 11/04/2012 12:04, James Cheney wrote: >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> Specialization and alternate are relations between entities in the semantics. >>>> >>>> Saying that "entities are things" is vague: does it mean "all entities are things", or does it also mean "entities and things are the same concept"? Can you please refer me to the resolution text on this point? >>>> >>>> Does this mean that "all entities are things"? This is sensible, and is allowed but not required by the semantics. >>>> >>>> Conversely, does it mean "all things are entities"? We've been using "Thing" to talk about things that can change over time, whereas entities are fixed aspects of such things - which we need in order to provide provenance records that are stable over time. So if we say "all entities are things, AND all things are entities" then this distinction disappears and becomes purposeless. >>>> >>>> An Entity could be a Thing in the semantics. The semantics doesn't say whether entities are things or not. All it prescribes are >>>> >>>> - each Thing has a lifetime and some attributes that can vary >>>> - each Entity has a lifetime and some attributes which don't vary >>>> - each Entity is formally linked to a Thing with a larger lifetime, by a function thingOf. >>>> >>>> : the sets of entities and things could be any sets and could overlap. However, any Thing in an instance of the semantics that chances over time cannot be an Entity. >>>> >>>> One can think of the thingOf function in different ways. I tend to think of the entities as "information about things", with the thingOf function linking the entity to the thing that it is about, but I understand that this perspective isn't widely shared. I'm happy to rephrase it if we can find a more agreeable term. >>>> >>>> Would these rephrasings be OK with you (and others, especially Tim): >>>> >>>> "alternateOf: To express when one Entity is an aspect of the same Thing as another Entity." >>>> >>>> "specializationOf: To express when one of two alternate Entities is more a specific aspect of the Thing they are both based on" >>>> >>>> --James >>>> >>>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 6:14 AM, Luc Moreau wrote: >>>> >>>>> Hi James, >>>>> >>>>> I have some difficulty with your descriptions of specialization. >>>>> >>>>> "specializationOf_1: To express when one entity provides a more specific description of the same thing as another entity." >>>>> >>>>> This seems to indicate that an entity is a description of a thing. >>>>> >>>>> It thought that an entity *IS* a thing, and we provide descriptions for entities. So, I don't think that an entity >>>>> describes something. >>>>> >>>>> A long time ago, I asked if specialization/alternate were relations between descriptions or between entities. The >>>>> group responded these relations were between entities! >>>>> >>>>> Given this, does your classification still hold? Can it be phrased differently? >>>>> >>>>> Luc >>>>> >>>>> On 11/04/2012 05:43, Luc Moreau wrote: >>>>>> Tracker, this is ISSUE-29. >>>>>> >>>>>> Professor Luc Moreau >>>>>> Electronics and Computer Science >>>>>> University of Southampton >>>>>> Southampton SO17 1BJ >>>>>> United Kingdom >>>>>> >>>>>> On 9 Apr 2012, at 15:58, "James Cheney"<jcheney@inf.ed.ac.uk> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> In reading the discussion over the last week and while reviewing the various documents, I've noticed that "specialization" seems to be being used in (at least) three different ways. I think this is a contributor to the confusion concerning specialization and alternate. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> specializationOf_1: To express when one entity provides a more specific description of the same thing as another entity. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Example: The entity ex:article in the primer, with its versions ex:articleV1 and ex:articleV2, both of which are specializations of ex:article. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> This is the sense that I have been assuming and it is what is reflected in the semantics. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> specializationOf_2: To express when one entity provides more specific information than another (which need not be about the same thing!) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Example: In PROV-DM-CONSTRAINTS: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> specializationOf(customerInChairAt6pm, customerInChair) >>>>>>> specializationOf(customerInChairAt7pm, customerInChair) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> To me this does not make sense because the entities customerInChairAt6pm and customerInChairAt7pm are about different "Things" (the different customers Alice and Bob). So there is no single Thing to which customerInChair describes, contradicting (what I thought was) the consensus that an entity describes an aspect of exactly one thing. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> In my view, this sense of specialization is specious, since one entity may provide "more specific" information than another entity but the two entities need not be about the same thing, as the relationship may be purely coincidental. To carry this to an extreme, any entity is a "specializationOf(2) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> specializationOf_3: (work / item) To express when one entity describes a more concrete thing that is an instance of a more abstract thing described by another entity. This is like the work/item distinction in FRBR. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Example: The primer refers to a file (which can have multiple versions), and a specific copy of a file on a hard disk, as another example of specialization. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> To me this does not make sense because a file, in the abstract, is just a sequence of bits, which could be physically realized anywhere or could be realized in multiple places at once. A file-on-disk might carry the same information as an abstract-file, but can only exist in one place. We do not talk about locations explicitly in PROV, but even so, I think this is confusing: again, to carry the argument to an extreme, the number 2, in the abstract, is not the same kind of thing as a piece of paper with "two" written on it. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I think specializationOf_3 ("instance/realization of") is a sensible notion, but it should not be conflated with specializationOf_1. There are already vocabularies that deal with this type of relationship, such as FRBR itself. If we believe that PROV should attempt to solve this in a new way, I think we should avoid overloading the notion of specialization as "different, more specific information about the same thing" with this notion, which is really about "more concrete instance of an abstract thing" >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> To summarize: >>>>>>> - I think we should be careful about these different senses of "specializationOf". >>>>>>> - Only the first sense is supported by the current version of the semantics. >>>>>>> - If we can agree on one of these definitions for specializationOf, but believe other senses need to be modeled, we should introduce additional relations to name them, and ensure that the meanings are clear and they are used consistently in examples. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> --James >>>>>>> -- >>>>>>> The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in >>>>>>> Scotland, with registration number SC005336. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>>> >> >> > > -- The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
Received on Thursday, 12 April 2012 11:36:57 UTC