Introduction to Protégé: Difference between revisions
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'''DATE''': Saturday and Sunday, August 11-12, 2012. | |||
''' | '''VENUE for FACE-TO-FACE PARTICIPATION''': Room14A, Basement, [http://www.buffalo.edu/buildings/building?id=BALDY Baldy Hall], University at Buffalo [http://www.buffalo.edu/home/visiting-ub/north-campus-directions.html North Campus]. | ||
'''FACULTY''': Ron Rudnicki (CUBRC, Buffalo), Alan Ruttenberg (University at Buffalo), Barry Smith (University at Buffalo) | |||
== DESCRIPTION == | |||
This course is for absolute beginners in ontology. It provides an introduction to the Protégé 4.2 ontology editor, details of which can be found [http://protege.stanford.edu/ here]. | This course is for absolute beginners in ontology. It provides an introduction to the Protégé 4.2 ontology editor, details of which can be found [http://protege.stanford.edu/ here]. | ||
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It will begin with a brief introduction to ontology building, and to the use and importance of ontologies, with examples from medicine and defense. This will be followed by an introduction to the Web Ontology Language (OWL). The bulk of the course will consist of an interactive introduction to the use of Protégé in building an ontology. No background in the use of computer languages and programming is presupposed. All sessions will be highly interactive. | It will begin with a brief introduction to ontology building, and to the use and importance of ontologies, with examples from medicine and defense. This will be followed by an introduction to the Web Ontology Language (OWL). The bulk of the course will consist of an interactive introduction to the use of Protégé in building an ontology. No background in the use of computer languages and programming is presupposed. All sessions will be highly interactive. | ||
''' | == SCHEDULE == | ||
A detailed '''schedule''' and expanded course description are provided '''[[Protégé Tutorial Schedule | here]]'''. | |||
What follows is a detailed schedule of the two-day [http://ncorwiki.buffalo.edu/index.php/Introduction_to_Prot%C3%A9g%C3%A9 Protégé Tutorial] to be held in the University at Buffalo on August 11-12, 2012. | |||
'''Saturday, August 11, 2012''' | |||
::[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/Rudnicki-Protege-1.wmv Video] | |||
:Slides | |||
::[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/Smith-Introduction.pptx Smith] | |||
::[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/Rudnicki-Protege-1.pptx Rudnicki] | |||
:Example OWL File | |||
::[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/TutorialMonopolyOntology.owl Monology Ontology (1)] | |||
''' | :9:00-9:30am Introduction to Ontology (Barry Smith) | ||
:9:30-10:30am Introduction to RDF and RDFS (Ron Rudnicki) | |||
:10:30-10:45am Break | |||
:10:45-12:30pm Introduction to OWL (RR) | |||
:12:30-1:30pm Lunch | |||
:1:30-3:00pm Developing an Ontology in Protégé OWL - Classes and Properties (RR) | |||
:3:00-3:15pm Break | |||
:3:15-5:00pm Developing an Ontology in Protégé OWL - Axioms and Restrictions (RR) | |||
'''Sunday, August 12, 2012''' | |||
:[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/Rudnicki-Protege-2.wmv Video] | |||
:[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/Rudnicki-Protege-2.pptx Slides] | |||
:Example OWL files | |||
::[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/MonopolyOntology.owl Monopology Ontology (2)] | |||
::[http://ncor.buffalo.edu/2012/Game1.owl Monopology Game] | |||
:9:00-10:00am Protégé Tips and Plugins (RR) | |||
:10:00-10:30am SPARQL Query Language for RDF (RR) | |||
:10:30-10:45am Break | |||
:10:45-12:15pm SPARQL Query Language for RDF (RR) | |||
:12:15-1:15pm Lunch | |||
:1:15-2:45pm Other OWL Editors - TopBraid Composer (RR) | |||
:2:45-3:00pm Break | |||
:3:00-5:00pm Examples of ontology resources and how you can use them (see [http://goo.gl/AY3RN Scratchpad] | |||
The tutorial is designed for participants having little to no experience in creating ontologies using computers. The goal is to provide a sufficiently broad covering of OWL, Protégé, and other semantic web technologies so that participants can be immediately productive and have an understanding of the range of technologies that they build upon to support their own projects. | |||
''' | '''Day 1''' will begin with an introduction to the theory and best practices of ontology development delivered by Barry Smith. Following this introduction will be a survey of the Web Ontology Language (OWL) that can be used to express the content of an ontology. The remainder of the day will turn to the more practical matter of using Protégé to write an ontology in OWL, including how to import terms from other ontologies using the [http://obi-ontology.org/page/MIREOT MIREOT] method. An example ontology will be created in this section of the course and participants will have the opportunity to acquire hands-on experience in the use of Protégé. | ||
'''Day 2''' will demonstrate how to enhance the capabilities of the standard version of Protégé with plugins, including the use of OWL-reasoners and the SPARQL Query Language for RDF to expand and explore ontologies. The course will conclude with a comparison of Protégé with the Free Edition of TopBraid Composer ™ and a brief overview of common problems arising from the use of OWL to express an ontology. | |||
It will familiarize participants with: | |||
:: | :the use of the Protégé-OWL editor to create and maintain ontologies | ||
:enhancing Protégé with plugins | |||
:OWL reasoning and the use of the query language SPARQL | |||
During the hands-on portion of the course, participants will learn how to navigate the latest version of the Protégé tool set, which supports the full OWL 2 standard. | |||
''' | '''Background Reading''' | ||
:A short but useful introductory tutorial on Protege-OWL can be found at [http://protegewiki.stanford.edu/wiki/Protege4GettingStarted Getting Started with Protege 4]. | |||
:A more comprehensive treatment is provided in [http://owl.cs.manchester.ac.uk/tutorials/protegeowltutorial Matthew Horridge's Protege-OWL Tutorial]. | |||
:[http://ontology.buffalo.edu/smith Barry Smith's Ontology Page], including links to audio and video presentations, and a page containing [http://ontology.buffalo.edu/smith/articles/ontologies.htm introductory material on ontology]. | |||
== FACULTY BIOS == | |||
''' | '''[http://org.buffalo.edu/rarp/rudnicki_vita.html Ron Rudnicki]''' has a background in the areas of software quality assurance, database programming, application development and data warehousing. For the last 6 years he has developed ontologies for the Biometric Identity Management Agency, Army Net-Centric Data Strategy Center of Excellence (ANCDS CoE), and the IARPA Knowledge and Discovery Program. He is currently employed as a Senior Research Scientist at CUBRC, Inc. | ||
''' | '''[http://sciencecommons.org/about/whoweare/ruttenberg/ Alan Ruttenberg]''' is Director of the University at Buffalo Clinical and Translational Data Exchange. He is a prominent contributor to ontology research, and especially in the use of Semantic Web technology for integrating and querying biomedical knowledge. | ||
''' | '''[http://ontology.buffalo.edu/smith Barry Smith]''' is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy in the University at Buffalo. He has published many papers on theoretical and applied ontology and is involved in multiple ontology projects in the biomedical, military and other domains. | ||
[[Participation Information]] |
Latest revision as of 14:39, 9 August 2014
DATE: Saturday and Sunday, August 11-12, 2012.
VENUE for FACE-TO-FACE PARTICIPATION: Room14A, Basement, Baldy Hall, University at Buffalo North Campus.
FACULTY: Ron Rudnicki (CUBRC, Buffalo), Alan Ruttenberg (University at Buffalo), Barry Smith (University at Buffalo)
DESCRIPTION
This course is for absolute beginners in ontology. It provides an introduction to the Protégé 4.2 ontology editor, details of which can be found here.
It will begin with a brief introduction to ontology building, and to the use and importance of ontologies, with examples from medicine and defense. This will be followed by an introduction to the Web Ontology Language (OWL). The bulk of the course will consist of an interactive introduction to the use of Protégé in building an ontology. No background in the use of computer languages and programming is presupposed. All sessions will be highly interactive.
SCHEDULE
A detailed schedule and expanded course description are provided here.
What follows is a detailed schedule of the two-day Protégé Tutorial to be held in the University at Buffalo on August 11-12, 2012.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
- Example OWL File
- 9:00-9:30am Introduction to Ontology (Barry Smith)
- 9:30-10:30am Introduction to RDF and RDFS (Ron Rudnicki)
- 10:30-10:45am Break
- 10:45-12:30pm Introduction to OWL (RR)
- 12:30-1:30pm Lunch
- 1:30-3:00pm Developing an Ontology in Protégé OWL - Classes and Properties (RR)
- 3:00-3:15pm Break
- 3:15-5:00pm Developing an Ontology in Protégé OWL - Axioms and Restrictions (RR)
Sunday, August 12, 2012
- Example OWL files
- 9:00-10:00am Protégé Tips and Plugins (RR)
- 10:00-10:30am SPARQL Query Language for RDF (RR)
- 10:30-10:45am Break
- 10:45-12:15pm SPARQL Query Language for RDF (RR)
- 12:15-1:15pm Lunch
- 1:15-2:45pm Other OWL Editors - TopBraid Composer (RR)
- 2:45-3:00pm Break
- 3:00-5:00pm Examples of ontology resources and how you can use them (see Scratchpad
The tutorial is designed for participants having little to no experience in creating ontologies using computers. The goal is to provide a sufficiently broad covering of OWL, Protégé, and other semantic web technologies so that participants can be immediately productive and have an understanding of the range of technologies that they build upon to support their own projects.
Day 1 will begin with an introduction to the theory and best practices of ontology development delivered by Barry Smith. Following this introduction will be a survey of the Web Ontology Language (OWL) that can be used to express the content of an ontology. The remainder of the day will turn to the more practical matter of using Protégé to write an ontology in OWL, including how to import terms from other ontologies using the MIREOT method. An example ontology will be created in this section of the course and participants will have the opportunity to acquire hands-on experience in the use of Protégé.
Day 2 will demonstrate how to enhance the capabilities of the standard version of Protégé with plugins, including the use of OWL-reasoners and the SPARQL Query Language for RDF to expand and explore ontologies. The course will conclude with a comparison of Protégé with the Free Edition of TopBraid Composer ™ and a brief overview of common problems arising from the use of OWL to express an ontology.
It will familiarize participants with:
- the use of the Protégé-OWL editor to create and maintain ontologies
- enhancing Protégé with plugins
- OWL reasoning and the use of the query language SPARQL
During the hands-on portion of the course, participants will learn how to navigate the latest version of the Protégé tool set, which supports the full OWL 2 standard.
Background Reading
- A short but useful introductory tutorial on Protege-OWL can be found at Getting Started with Protege 4.
- A more comprehensive treatment is provided in Matthew Horridge's Protege-OWL Tutorial.
- Barry Smith's Ontology Page, including links to audio and video presentations, and a page containing introductory material on ontology.
FACULTY BIOS
Ron Rudnicki has a background in the areas of software quality assurance, database programming, application development and data warehousing. For the last 6 years he has developed ontologies for the Biometric Identity Management Agency, Army Net-Centric Data Strategy Center of Excellence (ANCDS CoE), and the IARPA Knowledge and Discovery Program. He is currently employed as a Senior Research Scientist at CUBRC, Inc.
Alan Ruttenberg is Director of the University at Buffalo Clinical and Translational Data Exchange. He is a prominent contributor to ontology research, and especially in the use of Semantic Web technology for integrating and querying biomedical knowledge.
Barry Smith is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy in the University at Buffalo. He has published many papers on theoretical and applied ontology and is involved in multiple ontology projects in the biomedical, military and other domains.