Ontological Engineering: Difference between revisions

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[[Dial-in instructions]]
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*16:05 Jordan Feenstra and Yonatan Schreiber: Music Ontology [http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2013/IE500/Presentations1/MusicTheoryOntology.pptx Slides]
*16:25 Yi Yang and Jeon-Young Kang: GIS Ontology [http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2013/IE500/Presentations1/Geospatial.pptx Slides]
*16:45 David Lominac: Customer Ontology [http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2013/IE500/Presentations1/Customer-&-Invoice-Ontolology.pptx Slides]
*17:00 Lucas Mesmer: Manufacturing Ontology [http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2013/IE500/Presentations1/Manufacturing-Mesmer.pptx Slides]
*17:15 Travis Allen: Twitter Ontology [http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2013/IE500/Presentations1/Twitter-Ontology.pptx Slides]
*17:30 Chad Stahl: Chemical Manufacturing Ontology [http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2013/IE500/Presentations1/Chemical-Manufacturing-Ontology.pptx Slides]
*17:45 Brian Donohue and Neil Otte: Personality Ontology [http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2013/IE500/Presentations1/Personality-Ontology.pptx Slides]
[[Schedule]]
[[Schedule]]


Guidance for Presentations on November 25 and December 2
Guidance for Presentations on November 25 and December 2
:Schedule of presentations
:Send Powerpoints to phismith@buffalo.edu before midnight on the day before your presentation
:Send Powerpoints to phismith@buffalo.edu before midnight on the day before your presentation
:How your presentation should be structured
:How your presentation should be structured

Revision as of 12:49, 25 November 2013

Title: Ontological Engineering

Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering: IE 500 (Section 001). Registration number 24419

Cross-listed with Department of Philosophy: PHI 598. Registration number 24350

Time: Mondays, 4-6:50pm, Fall 2013

Room: Baldy 200G, UB North Campus

Instructors: Barry Smith and Ron Rudnicki

Office hours: By appointment via email at [1] and [2]

For Lab sessions


August 26: Basic Introduction to Ontology

  • We will begin by addressing questions such as: What is an ontology? What are the differences and interrelations between ontology (philosophy), ontology (science), and ontology (engineering)? How are ontologies used? We will also provide an introduction to Basic Formal Ontology (BFO), focusing on a discussion of the question: What is a plan?
  • Lab 1: Introduction to Protégé, installation, configuration, and navigation Slides Video

September 9: An Overview of Ontology Projects in Military Domains

  • We will begin with a video Introduction to Semantic Technology in the DoD Business Mission Area by Denis Wisnosky]. We will then describe how ontology is being used for the horizontal integration of warfighter intelligence data within the framework of the US Army’s Distributed Common Ground System Standard Cloud (DSC) initiative. We outline how ontologies are being applied to bring about what we call the ‘semantic enhancement’ of data models used within each intelligence discipline. We then show how the strategy can help to overcome tendencies to stovepiping of intelligence data, and thus to help connecting the dots across different information sources.
  • Lab 2: Protégé, building the taxonomy, introduction to defining classes with OWL Slides Video

September 16: Ontology-Based Strategies for Information Engineering in the Healthcare Domains

  • Health care today rests increasingly on the proper use of data deriving from different sources (data pertaining to genes, diseases, symptoms, drugs, medical devices, procedures, hospital infections and other adverse events, hospital management, billing, reporting, and many more). We provide an introduction to the world of healthcare data management, with special emphasis on the role of ontologies and standard terminologies.
  • 7. Informatics and Obamacare Slides
  • 8. Electronic Diseases Slides
  • 9. Healthcare Information Management Slides
  • 10. Strategies for Data Integration Slides
  • Lab 3: Protégé, defining class relationships Slides Video
  • Lab Note: Steps to Get OWLViz to Function in Protege
a. Go to the Graphviz website Graphviz Downloads and select the installer package that is appropriate for your machine. For Windows, this is the Microsoft installer file: graphviz-2.34.msi
b. Install graphviz and remember the path name of the installation folder
c. Open Protege and go to the File/Preferences menu option. Once open, go to the OWLViz tab.
d. Manually enter or use the browse button to select the Dot Application Path to the dot.exe file. If your path name contains a space, include the entire name in double quotation marks: "C:\Program Files\Graphviz2.34\bin\dot.exe"
e. Select the "OK" button.
f. Open and ontology and navigate to the OWLViz tab in Protege.
g. Select one of the classes in Class Hierarchy and confirm that you can see a graph of the class including it's parent and children classes.

September 23: Use of Ontologies in Tracking Systems

  • A referent tracking system (RTS) is a special kind of digital information system that is designed to keep track of both (1) what is the case in reality and (2) what is expressed in other information systems about what is believed to be the case in reality. An RTS also keeps track of how changes in the information system correspond to changes in the reality outside that system. We will provide an introduction to referent tracking and its implementations. Reading: How to track absolutely everything?

September 30: Ontology and the Semantic Web

  • The term "Semantic Web" was introduced by Tim Berners-Lee and others in the late 1990's (1, 2) and first popularized in a paper in 2001 in Scientific American (see below). Berners-Lee summarizes the idea as "a web of data that can be processed directly and indirectly by machines", an extension of the web of documents primarily intended for consumption by people. We will discuss the goals of the Semantic Web, current technologies, some technological/intellectual sub-communities, and review some applications in biomedicine and other fields. Topics to be discussed will include: Linked Open Data, The role of ontology, URIs, RDF, OWL, SPARQL, triple stores, and the World Wide WEB Consortium (W3C).

14. Semantic Web Vision and History Slides Video

15. Technology of the Semantic Web Slides Video

16. Applications Slides

Supplementary sources

Background Reading

  • Lab 5: Protégé, annotation properties, and versioning Slides Video

October 7: Military Ontology

Co-presenters: Ron Rudnicki and LTC William Mandrick

  • LTC Mandrick: Roots of Ontology in the Military Slides Video
  • LTC Mandrick: Operational Ontology: The Future of the Military Decision Making Process (MDMP) Slides Video
  • Ron Rudnicki: The CUBRC - US Army Ontology Collaboration Slides Video
  • Lab 6: Quiz - Protégé and OWL

October 14: An Overview of Ontology Projects in Financial Domains

  • Barry Smith: An Introduction to BFO's Treatment of Information Artifacts Slides Video
  • Charles Hoffman: An Overview of Ontology Projects in Financial Domains and Digital Financial Reporting Slides Video
  • Charles Hoffman: Financial Report Ontology: The Big Picture Video
  • Barry Smith: The Dublin Core Slides

Charles Hoffman is the "father of XBRL". He will provide a broad-ranging introduction to what a financial report is, why a financial report ontology is needed, and his vision for the digital financial reporting of the future.

Background slides on FIBO, the Financial Industry Business Ontology

Background slides on FRO, the Financial Report Ontology


October 21: Ontologies in Manufacturing: Pitfalls and Promise

Leonard F Jacuzzo: Semantically Enhanced Manufacturing Analytics Slides Video

Kumar Madurai: Linked Data in the Enterprise Slides Video

Ontology shows promise in the manufacturing domain. Foundational ontologies such as BFO allow for robust modeling of an entire product life-cycle, thereby enhancing knowledge management, product development, and process refinement. Automated manufacturing requires data describing each instance of a manufacturing process. Used correctly, this data facilitates predictive analytics and root cause analysis. Process and product ontologies focus analysis helping to avoid spurious correlations. Though Semantic Technology allows for computation utilizing ontologies, the embryonic state of this technology often requires sacrificing ontological rigor to achieve real-time data usage. This two-part lecture explores the promise of ontology in manufacturing and strategies for avoiding pitfalls one can face.

Preliminary readings

Ontology for Project Lifecycle Management
The Role of Foundational Ontologies in Manufacturing Domain Applications
Manufacturing Ontologies Portal
A Functional Ontology of Artifacts
Ontological Characterization of Functions
Sustainability and Interoperability
Aspects of the Mereology of Artifacts
Framework for Product Knowledge
The Design Ontology
Product Life Cycle Management
Ontology of Brands
  • Lab 8: Introduction to SPARQL, using select queries to explore DBpedia Slides Video

October 28: Optimization and Fusion

Moises Sudit: Ontology and Human Intelligences in Optimization and Fusion. Parts 1 and 2

Barry Smith: BFO and the Command Post of the Future

Moises Sudit: Ontology and Human Intelligences in Optimization and Fusion. Parts 3 and 4

  • Lab 9: SPARQL, extending select queries with filters, grouping, and booleans Slides Video



November 4: Ontology and Natural Language Processing

Jillian Chavez: A Survey of Natural Language Processing (NLP) Slides

Jillian Chaves has been a computational linguist/language engineer with CUBRC, Inc., since 2012. She holds a Master’s Degree in Linguistics from the University at Buffalo.

  • Lab 10: SPARQL, using construct queries to add instance data Slides Video



November 11: Ontology and Information Fusion Research

Introduction to Information Fusion Video
Multisource Fusion Video
Hard and Soft Fusion Video
  • Lab 11: SPARQL, updating instance data, other Semantic Web tools: Ontofox, D2RQ, and RDFa Slides

Video

Individuals.owl


November 18: The Role of Ontologies in Taming Big Data

Tanya Malyuta (CUNY):

Ron Rudnicki: D2RQ -- How to Map Models to Ontologies Slides Video

Tatiana Malyuta, PhD, is Principal Data Architect and Researcher at Data Tactics Corporation and an Associate Professor of the New York College of Technology of CUNY. She is a subject matter expert in data design and data integration. Recently she has been working on integrated data stores on the Cloud within the context of the Army's Distributed Common Ground System (DCGS-A).

STIDS Background Slides

  • Lab 12: TBA

November 25: Presentations of Student Projects

Dial-in instructions

  • 16:05 Jordan Feenstra and Yonatan Schreiber: Music Ontology Slides
  • 16:25 Yi Yang and Jeon-Young Kang: GIS Ontology Slides
  • 16:45 David Lominac: Customer Ontology Slides
  • 17:00 Lucas Mesmer: Manufacturing Ontology Slides
  • 17:15 Travis Allen: Twitter Ontology Slides
  • 17:30 Chad Stahl: Chemical Manufacturing Ontology Slides
  • 17:45 Brian Donohue and Neil Otte: Personality Ontology Slides

Schedule

Guidance for Presentations on November 25 and December 2

Send Powerpoints to phismith@buffalo.edu before midnight on the day before your presentation
How your presentation should be structured
Examples of what to include
Statement of scope of the ontology
The true path rule
Identification of existing ontologies
Explanation of how your ontology differs from (or incorporates) these
Screenshots of parts of the ontology with some examples of important terms and definitions
Summaries of potential applications of the ontology
Evaluation
Completeness
  • Quiz: SPARQL

December 2: Presentations of Student Projects

Schedule

Background

Ontologies are an important tool in all areas where data is collected and described by different groups in different ways. Ontologies provide taxonomy-based computerized lexica used to describe diverse bodies of data. They thereby help to aggregate and compare data, to make data more easily discoverable, and to allow large bodies of data to be more effectively searched and analyzed. Ontologies also play an important role in the so-called Semantic Web, where the Web Ontology Language (OWL) forms a central building block in the stack of web technology standards created by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).

UB ontologists are involved in a variety of national and international projects in the military, healthcare, transport and financial domains. Examples include:

There is an acknowledged shortage of persons with ontological engineering expertise in these and related areas.

The Course

This is, as far as we know, the first ever course on Ontological Engineering to be offered in a US university. It will provide an introduction to the methods and uses of ontological engineering, focusing on applications in the areas of military intelligence, healthcare, and finance. It will provide an overview of how ontologies are created and used, together with practical experience in the development of OWL ontologies and in the use of associated web technology standards. It will also address some of the human factors underlying the success and failure of ontology projects, including issues of ontology governance and dissemination.

The course will be built out of 3-hour sessions, each of which will involve 2 hours of lecturing and discussion and 1 hour of practical experience with ontology editing software and other semantic web technologies. Students may elect to take the course for 2 credit hours without the practical segment.

The course will feature occasional guest lectures by leading ontologists from Buffalo and elsewhere, including participants in on-going ontology projects.


Outcomes

By the end of the class, students will be able to understand the nature, utility and scope of contemporary ontological engineering. They will understand methods and rules for ontology development; gain experience of what is involved in contributing to ontological initiatives, and learn to understand the benefits and risks of such initiatives.

Grading and Related Policies and Services

All students will be required to take an active part in class discussions throughout the semester. In addition they will be required to design and complete an ontology project, including written description, and brief presentation of the project in class. Students enrolled in the practical segment will be required to create a Protégé file to accompany their ontology project, and also to complete quizzes designed to gauge developing competence in the use of the Protégé Ontology Editor and SPARQL query language.

For 3 credit hour students, your grade will be determined in five equal portions deriving from:

1. class participation (1.5% per class attended),
2. results of two quizzes relating to the lab portion of the course
3. written description of ontology project (3000 words; deadline December 2),
4. Protégé ontology file (deadline November 25),
5. class presentation.

For 2 credit hour students, your grade is determined as follows:

1. class participation (1.5% per class attended),
2. written description of ontology project (4000 words; deadline December 2) (50%),
3. class presentation (30%).

For policy regarding incompletes see here

For academic integrity policy see here

For accessibility services see here

Preliminary Reading and Video Materials