- From: Natasha Noy <noy@SMI.Stanford.EDU>
- Date: Wed, 24 Mar 2004 10:26:00 -0800
- To: "Bernard Vatant" <bernard.vatant@mondeca.com>
- Cc: SWBPD <public-swbp-wg@w3.org>
>Are there other concrete experience on that, not only theoretical >considerations? Seems >like there are not so many people exploring the terminology-ontology >interoperability. Or >are they? I am not sure if Bernard's concern is only about subject hierarchies or about mixing ontologies and terminologies in general. If it is the former, than the message below is not very relevant. For the latter, here are a few words from the experience in a number of medical-informatics projects in our lab. In our experience, the issue of linking ontologies and terminologies comes up often. There is no lack of (often reasonably well-structured) controlled terminologies in medical informatics, using them makes sense both from reusability and interoperability perspectives. However, in our projects and their ontologies, it inevitably led to mixing classes and instances, and we really didn't find any practical workarounds (although admittedly we were not wedded to DLs, so didn't look too hard). Consider for example clinical guidelines (again, this is a practical example from a couple of kb-based systems here). A specific clinical guideline (an instance of a class Clinical Guideline) represents the tests, decisions, etc. in diagnosing and treating a particular ailment. One of the reference terminologies used here is that of drugs. (cf Chris's message later: a drug hierarchy is not a partonomy, it is indeed a subclass hieararchy. You have beta-clockers, and specific types of beta-blockers as subclasses, etc.). So, a specific instance of a clinical guideline must refer to classes of drugs to be prescribed. Again, at a particular step in a guideline you want to prescribe a specific beta-blocker. But you want this guideline to be retrieved when looking for all guidelines using beta-blockers. Note, the guideline really refers to a class of drugs and not a specific bottle with pills. I could find more examples, Hope this helps. Natasha
Received on Wednesday, 24 March 2004 13:36:06 UTC