- From: Phillip Lord <phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2006 10:39:34 +0100
- To: Steve Chervitz <Steve_Chervitz@affymetrix.com>
- Cc: <public-semweb-lifesci@w3.org>
>>>>> "SC" == Steve Chervitz <Steve_Chervitz@affymetrix.com> writes: >> They also wrote an interesting paper on the state of >> bio-ontologies. >> >> Nature Biotechnology 23, 1095 - 1098 (2005) >> doi:10.1038/nbt0905-1095 Are the current ontologies in biology >> good ontologies? >> >> Larisa N Soldatova & Ross D King SC> Also worth seeing: The MGED ontologies folks wrote a response to SC> this article that comments on the bio-ontology development SC> process, and addresses some statements Soldatova and King make SC> about MO which the MO folks feel are inaccurate or misleading: SC> Stoeckert C et al. Nature Biotechnology 24, 21 - 22 (2006) SC> doi:10.1038/nbt0106-21b Wrestling with SUMO and bio-ontologies SC> http://www.nature.com/nbt/journal/v24/n1/full/nbt0106-21b.html Their paper did cause, how shall I say, somewhat of a stir. SC> The reliance on and choice of upper level ontology seems to be a SC> big bone of contention. Are there any good reviews on these SC> discussing things like why there are so many of them and why SC> can't they be combined? Seems like the current trend is to SC> accept their existence and work towards making them SC> interoperable: If I were being cynical (those of you who know me will know how rare this is), I would suggest that it's a case of "standards are so good, that we need one each". The issue is a slightly deeper one in bio-ontologies. It's not clear that an upper ontology actually brings significant value to the table. The claimed advantage of interoperability between ontologies is, to my mind, somewhat bogus; they only really allow interoperability when you are querying over the concepts in the upper ontology. Much more important is that they help to ease the design of an ontology; you have more idea where concepts should go, so you can spend more time worrying about the details of what ever you are modelling and less about the big picture. On the flip side, they tend to complicate some stages of ontology development, mostly notably the first month when you have lots of biologists tearing their hair out trying to work out what a perjurant, continuant, sortal, self-standing kind is. The juries still out in my opinion. Phil
Received on Tuesday, 13 June 2006 09:39:54 UTC