- From: Bill Roberts <bill@swirrl.com>
- Date: Wed, 14 Oct 2015 08:54:42 -0400
- To: Alejandro Llaves <allaves@fi.upm.es>
- Cc: Frans Knibbe <frans.knibbe@geodan.nl>, Jon Blower <j.d.blower@reading.ac.uk>, SDW WG Public List <public-sdw-wg@w3.org>, "Heaven, Rachel E." <reh@bgs.ac.uk>
- Message-ID: <CAMTVsunaTTc2-RY44_9X5GG58o+5GjkgMwUBFRnHrHftJVbrNw@mail.gmail.com>
Hi all Sorry to perhaps re-open a much older discussion - but while I appreciate the importance of specifying temporal aspects of spatial data, tackling the fundamentals of 'temporal data on the web' feels like it ought to be beyond our scope. Is no-one else addressing this under the general Data on the Web umbrella? We need it, and if no other group has solved it then I suppose we have to - but it feels like something that has much broader applicability than in our working group. Cheers Bill On 14 October 2015 at 06:25, Alejandro Llaves <allaves@fi.upm.es> wrote: > Hi Frans, > > IMO, the two examples included in the current description of the vagueness > requirement are fair examples of vague and imprecise temporal descriptions > (added after a group's discussion, if I remember correctly). As Rachel > said, "afternoon of June 1st" may have different interpretations on the > ending time, not to mention that the year is missing. In the case of > "second quarter of the 9th century", there is no reference to the calendar > used; and depending on the event granularity, e.g. an earthquake or a war, > 25 years may be more or less imprecise. > > Cheers, > Alejandro > > On 9 October 2015 at 17:52, Heaven, Rachel E. <reh@bgs.ac.uk> wrote: > >> The vagueness (e.g. “before 1972” or “early 1950s”, or even “the end of >> the Jurassic”) can usually be expressed by an interval with a different >> precision on each end, or an undefined start or end. “Afternoon of June >> 1st” is an interval with a precise start time and a less precise end, >> depending on culture and season... >> >> >> >> Then there are the other examples where one component of the date might >> be known very precisely (a photo from Christmas day), but the year is known >> with less certainty. >> >> >> >> So perhaps: >> >> 'It should be possible to make use of possibilities of temporal reference >> systems to express components of time instants and components of time >> intervals at various levels of precision'. >> >> >> >> Regards, >> >> Rachel >> >> >> >> *From:* Frans Knibbe [mailto:frans.knibbe@geodan.nl] >> *Sent:* 09 October 2015 14:25 >> *To:* Jon Blower >> *Cc:* SDW WG Public List >> *Subject:* Re: UCR issue 26 >> >> >> >> Hi Jon, >> >> >> >> Yes, I think this is about temporal precision. For Gregorian time it is >> possible to have different precisions in ISO 8601: 2003-04-27T23:45 is more >> precise than 2003-04-27, which is more precise than 2003. I don't think >> playing with precision like this is possible with XSD datatypes, especially >> when one is limited to xsd:dateTime. >> >> >> >> Other temporal reference systems have precision too. For example, in >> geological time 'Paleogene' is more precize than 'Cenozoic'. >> >> >> >> That would bring me to a requirement like 'It should be possible to make >> use of possiblities of temporal reference systems to express time at >> various levels of precision'. >> >> >> >> Regards, >> >> Frans >> >> >> >> 2015-10-08 17:38 GMT+02:00 Jon Blower <j.d.blower@reading.ac.uk>: >> >> Hi Frans, >> >> >> >> I see your point (both examples could be seen as extremely precise, >> depending on our expectations and application). >> >> >> >> Maybe instead of calling the requirement “temporal vagueness” it should >> be “temporal precision”, the requirement being to be able to express the >> precision of a time value. >> >> >> >> Cheers, >> >> Jon >> >> >> >> On 8 Oct 2015, at 15:59, Frans Knibbe <frans.knibbe@geodan.nl> wrote: >> >> >> >> Hello, >> >> >> >> This is a thread for trying to resolve UCR issue 26 >> <https://www.w3.org/2015/spatial/track/issues/26>. Again, the issue >> deals with clarification of a requirement. In this case it is about the OWL >> Time requirement Temporal vagueness >> <http://w3c.github.io/sdw/UseCases/SDWUseCasesAndRequirements.html#TemporalVagueness> >> . >> >> >> >> Current phrasing is: *"It should be possible to describe time points and >> intervals in a vague, imprecise manner. For instance, to represent an event >> happened on the afternoon of June 1st or at the second quarter of the 9th >> century."* >> >> >> >> The examples seem to be neither vague nor imprecise. Could other examples >> be supplied, or could be explained why the examples are vague and/or >> imprecise? >> >> >> >> Especially the time specialists among us: please help in getting this >> requirement in shape. >> >> >> >> Greetings, >> >> Frans >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> ------------------------------ >> This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC is >> subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents of this >> email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless it is exempt >> from release under the Act. Any material supplied to NERC may be stored in >> an electronic records management system. >> >> -- >> Alejandro Llaves >> >> Ontology Engineering Group (OEG) >> >> Artificial Intelligence Department >> >> Universidad Politécnica de Madrid >> >> Avda. Montepríncipe s/n >> >> Boadilla del Monte, 28660 Madrid, Spain >> >> >> http://www.oeg-upm.net/index.php/phd/325-allaves >> >> >> allaves@fi.upm.es >> >>
Received on Wednesday, 14 October 2015 12:55:20 UTC