Re: [SKOS] The return of ISSUE-44 (was Re: TR : SKOS Reference Editor's Draft 23 December 2007)

Hi daniel,

That would seem intuitive in some case, but it is not in many KOS practices.
Consider the following quote from the NISO Z39.19 standard Simon has 
just pointed us to (and I think there is the same in ISO 2788)

> Associative Relationships
> This relationship covers associations between terms that are neither 
> equivalent nor hierarchical,

Antoine

> Are we still contemplating hierarchy to these relations? It would seem 
> "broader" and "narrower" are relations subsumed by "related".
>
> Daniel
>
> At 02:01 PM 1/9/2008, Simon Spero wrote:
>
>
>> Is it better  to label these relationships with the terms 'broader'
>> and 'narrower' whilst defining them with the semantics of 'related'?
>> Wouldn't it be better to use the standard labels to denote the
>> standard semantics, and use a special label, disjoint from broader,
>> for the non-hierarchical hierarchies?
>>
>> The SKOS Core Guide[1] originally aligned itself with Z39.19/BS8723;
>> I feel it's a mistake to abandon the standard semantics without also
>> abandoning the standard labels. The Library of Congress adopted the 
>> BT/ NT labels for its syndetic relationships  in the LCSH, without 
>> fixing
>> the semantics; this has not proven helpful :-)
>>
>>
>> Broader/Narrower Relationships
>>
>> To assert that one concept is broader in meaning (i.e. more general)
>> than another, where the scope (meaning) of one falls completely within
>> the scope of the other, use the skos:broader property. To assert the
>> inverse, that one concept is narrower in meaning (i.e. more specific)
>> than another, use the skos:narrower property.
>> [...]
>> The properties skos:broader and skos:narrower are transitive properties.
>>
>> See also section on hierarchies in BS8723.
>>
>>  [1, §#sechierarchy]
>>
>> Simon
>>
>> [1]  Alistair Miles and Dan Brickley,SKOS Core Guide (November, 2005).
>> Available at  http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-skos-core-guide/
>
>
>

Received on Thursday, 10 January 2008 09:38:59 UTC