[esip-semantictech] Geospatial Semantics and Ontology sessions at American Association of Geographers (AAG) annual meeting, New Orleans, April 10-14

John Graybeal jbgraybeal at mindspring.com
Sun Oct 29 20:15:29 EDT 2017


If it isn't too late, I suggest the emphasis on '3.0.0' (as opposed to '3') is excessively precise. Especially because we know the more recent versions are more better.

I realise there are arguments both ways on this nit, just wanted to say how it struck me.

john

> On 20 Oct 2017, at 14:07, Mcgibbney, Lewis J (398M) via esip-semanticweb <esip-semanticweb at lists.esipfed.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi Bhaskar and Folks,
> 
> I complete agree… a grounded definition, based upon how SWEET is actually used would be preferable (
> 
> Thank you to everyone who’s sent feedback for the AAG abstract. Please see below for the updated version which has merged everyone’s suggestions. If there is anything else, please let me know. Thank you
> 
> Title: SWEET Ontology Suite v3.0.0: Development, Alignments and Use Cases
> 
> Lewis McGibbney, Brandon Whitehead, John Graybeal, Carlos Rueda, Pier Buttigieg, Simon Cox, Ruth Duerr, Beth Huffer, Thomas Narrock, Chris Mungall, Douglas Fils, Stian Soiland-Reyes, Bhaskar Ramachandran
> 
> Abstract: Version 3.0.0 of the Semantic Web for Earth and Environmental Terminology (SWEET) Ontology suite was recently released under new community management and governance by ESIP’s Semantic Technologies Committee. SWEET is a highly modular ontology suite with ~6000 concepts in ~200 separate ontologies covering Earth system science. SWEET is a mid-level ontology and consists of nine top-level concepts that can be used as a foundation for domain-specific ontologies that extend these top-level SWEET components. SWEET’s own domain-specific ontologies, which extend the upper level ontologies, can provide users interested in further developing a particular domain with a solid set of concepts to get started. SWEET ontologies are written in W3C Turtle; the Terse RDF Triple Language and are publicly available under the Apache License v2.0. This presentation will provide a three-pronged update on (i) advances in SWEET since its transition from NASA JPL over to the open source, community-driven management and governance structure now overseen by the ESIP Semantic Technologies Committee, (ii) ongoing alignment activities with existing semantic technology resources such as the OBO Foundry collection, W3C SOSA/SSN, W3C PROV-O, etc., and (iii) uses of SWEET across old, new and unexpected domains including architecture, engineering and construction, provenance of science data product generation, search and information retrieval query expansion, article and text tagging, and a whole host more. This session aims to attract both new comers and experienced Geospatial and Spatiotemporal Ontology and Semantics enthusiasts. Attendees will leave with a significantly improved understanding of what SWEET currently is, what it hopes to become, and how one can use it for a wide variety of scenarios.
> 
> Dr. Lewis John McGibbney Ph.D., B.Sc.
> Data Scientist II
> 
> Computer Science for Data Intensive Applications Group (398M)
> Instrument Software and Science Data Systems Section (398)
> 
> Jet Propulsion Laboratory
> 
> California Institute of Technology 
> 
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> Email: lewis.j.mcgibbney at jpl.nasa.gov
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Dare Mighty Things
> 
> On 10/20/17, 11:42 AM, "esip-semanticweb on behalf of esip-semanticweb-request at lists.esipfed.org" <esip-semanticweb-bounces at lists.esipfed.org on behalf of esip-semanticweb-request at lists.esipfed.org> wrote:
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>       1. Re: Geospatial Semantics and Ontology sessions at American
>          Association of Geographers (AAG) annual meeting, New Orleans,
>          April 10-14
>          (Ramachandran, Bhaskar (GSFC-619.0)[SCIENCE SYSTEMS AND APPLICATIONS INC])
> 
> 
>    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
>    Message: 1
>    Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2017 18:42:03 +0000
>    From: "Ramachandran, Bhaskar (GSFC-619.0)[SCIENCE SYSTEMS AND
>    	APPLICATIONS INC]" <bhaskar.ramachandran at nasa.gov>
>    To: Beth Huffer <beth at lingualogica.net>
>    Cc: "Mcgibbney, Lewis J (398M)" <Lewis.J.Mcgibbney at jpl.nasa.gov>,
>    	"esip-semanticweb at lists.esipfed.org"
>    	<esip-semanticweb at lists.esipfed.org>
>    Subject: Re: [esip-semantictech] Geospatial Semantics and Ontology
>    	sessions at American Association of Geographers (AAG) annual meeting,
>    	New Orleans, April 10-14
>    Message-ID: <C88B617D-845A-46E4-8CFE-C327E90ABD53 at nasa.gov>
>    Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
>    Lewis/Beth,
> 
>    Here is something that probably warrants a brief discussion next week: I have seen SWEET being described as both an upper-level ontology by some (e.g., Raskin & Pan, 2005), & as a mid-level ontology by others (e.g., Fox et al., 2009).  Given SWEET?s status as a collection of ontologies that exist at different levels of abstraction, and the fact that they help connect to domain-specific ontologies, you want to ensure that you describe it consistently.  Others with SWEET experience can probably help decide ...
> 
> 
>    bhaskar ?.
>    ..............................................................
>    Bhaskar Ramachandran
>    Terrestrial Information Systems Lab.
>    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
>    Code 619, Bldg. 32, S036L
>    Science Systems and Applications, Inc.
>    Greenbelt, Maryland 20771 USA
> 
>    +1.301.614.5460 [Phone]
>    +1.301.614.5269 [Fax]
>    bhaskar.ramachandran at nasa.gov<mailto:bhaskar.ramachandran at nasa.gov>
> 
> 
> 
> 
>    On Oct 20, 2017, at 11:48 AM, Beth Huffer <beth at lingualogica.net<mailto:beth at lingualogica.net>> wrote:
> 
> 
>    I've made a few edits as well. A marked-up draft is attached.
> 
>    Beth
> 
> 
>    On 10/19/17 12:51 PM, Ramachandran, Bhaskar (GSFC-619.0)[SCIENCE SYSTEMS AND APPLICATIONS INC] via esip-semanticweb wrote:
>    Hi Lewis,
> 
>    Attached are wee suggested edits.  I haven?t submitted an AAG abstract for quite some time & am not sure what their word limit is ? If it is more than the ~250 words in the current abstract, it would make sense to provide expansions for a few terms (e.g., ESIP, OBO, SOSA/SSN, etc.).  If not, not a big deal ? Overall, it is concise & reads well.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>    bhaskar ?.
>    ..............................................................
>    Bhaskar Ramachandran
>    Terrestrial Information Systems Lab.
>    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
>    Code 619, Bldg. 32, S036L
>    Science Systems and Applications, Inc.
>    Greenbelt, Maryland 20771 USA
> 
>    +1.301.614.5460 [Phone]
>    +1.301.614.5269 [Fax]
>    bhaskar.ramachandran at nasa.gov<mailto:bhaskar.ramachandran at nasa.gov>
> 
> 
> 
> 
>    On Oct 19, 2017, at 2:01 PM, Mcgibbney, Lewis J (398M) via esip-semanticweb <esip-semanticweb at lists.esipfed.org<mailto:esip-semanticweb at lists.esipfed.org>> wrote:
> 
>    Hi Folks,
>    With regards to Dalia?s message below I would like to submit the following abstract to the session at AAG. Additionally, I would like to acknowledge and credit ALL folks who have been involved with community involvement/development of SWEET since it came to ESIP.
>    So far, the names I have are as follows? if I?ve missed you then please let me know either on list or else directly. I think for the time being, we can do without affiliations. If these are required then I will reach out to folks.
>    Feedback on the abstract is appreciated.
>    Lewis
> 
>    Brandon Whitehead, John Graybeal, Carlos Rueda, Pier Buttigieg, Simon Cox, Ruth Duerr, Beth Huffer, Thomas Narrock, Chris Mungall, Douglas Fils, Stian Soiland-Reyes
> 
>    Title: SWEET Ontology Suite v3.0.0: Development, Alignments and Use Cases
> 
>    Abstract: Version 3.0.0 of the Semantic Web for Earth and Environmental Terminology (SWEET) Ontology Suite was recently released under new community management and governance by ESIP?s Semantic Technologies Committee. SWEET is a highly modular ontology suite with ~6000 concepts in ~200 separate ontologies covering Earth system science. SWEET consists of nine top-level concepts/ontologies and is considered as a middle-level ontology; most users add a domain-specific ontology which build off of these top-level SWEET components. SWEET ontologies are written in W3C Turtle; the Terse RDF Triple Language and are publicly available under the Apache License v2.0.
>    This presentation will provide a three-pronged update on (i) advances in SWEET since it?s transition from NASA JPL over to the open source, community driven management and governance structure now overseen by the ESIP Semantic Technologies Committee, and (ii) ongoing alignment activities with existing semantic technology resources such as the hugely popular OBO Foundry collection, W3C SOSA/SSN, W3C PROV-O, CHEBI, etc., and (iii) uses of SWEET across old, new and unexpected domains including building and engineering, provenance of science data product generation, search and information retrieval query expansion, article and text tagging and a whole host more.
>    This session will be aimed at both new comers and experienced Geospatial and Spatiotemporal Ontology and Semantics enthusiasts. Attendees will leave with a significantly improved understanding of what SWEET currently is, what it will become and how one can use it for a wide variety of scenarios.
> 
> 
>       Message: 1
>       Date: Wed, 18 Oct 2017 11:28:44 -0500
>       From: "Varanka, Dalia" <dvaranka at usgs.gov<mailto:dvaranka at usgs.gov>>
>       To: <esip-semanticweb at lists.esipfed.org<mailto:esip-semanticweb at lists.esipfed.org>>
>       Subject: [esip-semantictech] Geospatial Semantics and Ontology
>        sessions at American Association of Geographers (AAG) annual meeting,
>        New Orleans, April 10-14
>       Message-ID:
>        <CAH4dG4K6vaiqCKgLYY=QUVnvj-0SGhUggD7tNbuCJ4HvCxPDJA at mail.gmail.com<mailto:CAH4dG4K6vaiqCKgLYY=QUVnvj-0SGhUggD7tNbuCJ4HvCxPDJA at mail.gmail.com>>
>       Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
>       *Session Title: *Artificial Intelligence and Deep Learning Symposium:
>       ?Geospatial and
> 
>       Spatiotemporal Ontology and Semantics
> 
> 
> 
>       *Sponsoring AAG Specialty Groups: *Cyberinfrastructure (CI) Specialty
>       Group, Geographic Information Science and Systems
> 
> 
> 
>       *Session Organizer*:
> 
>       Alex Sorokine (*Oak Ridge National Laboratory*) (SorokinA at ornl.gov<mailto:SorokinA at ornl.gov>)
>       corresponding
> 
> 
> 
>       *Session Co-organizers*:
> 
>       Chen-Chieh Feng (*National University of Singapore*) (geofcc at nus.edu.sg<mailto:geofcc at nus.edu.sg>)
> 
>       Dalia Varanka (*USGS*) (dvaranka at usgs.gov<mailto:dvaranka at usgs.gov>)
> 
>       Jeon-Young Kang (*SUNY at Buffalo)* (jeonyoun at buffalo.edu<mailto:jeonyoun at buffalo.edu>)
> 
> 
> 
>       *Abstract Deadline: *Same as AAG Annual Meeting abstract submission deadline
> 
> 
> 
>       *AAG Session Id:* 406
> 
> 
> 
>       *Call for Papers:*
> 
>       Capturing and representing geospatial and spatiotemporal dimensions of
>       geographic knowledge is a great challenge from both theoretical and applied
>       perspectives. Latest advances in knowledge representation and ontology
>       engineering have spurred a number of traditional and novel geoprocessing
>       applications such as intelligent search and geographic information
>       retrieval, image understanding, integration of disparate and
>       multi-provenance spatial and spatiotemporal data, knowledge discovery from
>       Big Data, visual representation of geographic categories, information
>       extraction from unstructured sources, and many others.
> 
>       Encouraged by well-received special sessions on ontology and semantics for
>       several years now, we are again soliciting presentations on both
>       theoretical and applied aspects of geospatial and spatiotemporal ontologies
>       for a series of special sessions at the 2018 Association of
>       American Geographers Annual Meeting. We invite presentations focusing on
>       one or more of the following (or other related) areas of ontology research:
> 
> 
> 
>       ?     Spatial and spatiotemporal knowledge modeling, analysis,
>       formalization, and validation (thesauri, vocabularies and ontologies)
> 
>       ?     Semantic interoperability across domains, cultures, ethnicities,
>       languages and time, spatiotemporal models and reasoning
> 
>       ?     Semantic annotation methods, provenance, and standards for spatial
>       knowledge representation and processing (e.g. XML, RDF, RDFS, OWL)
> 
>       ?     Semantic extensions to spatial data infrastructures for the IoT,
>       sensor networks, VGI, and other application areas
> 
>       To present a paper or to participate in the session as a discussant, submit
>       your abstract through AAG web site and email your PIN to Alex Sorokine (
>       SorokinA at ornl.gov<mailto:SorokinA at ornl.gov>). Please follow standard AAG abstract submission
>       procedure and guidelines. If you have any questions please forward them to
>       one of the organizers.
> 
> 
>       --
>       Dalia Varanka
>       U.S. Geological Survey
>       1400 Independence Road
>       Rolla, MO 65401 USA
> 
>       Tel. 573.308.3897
>       Email: dvaranka at usgs.gov<mailto:dvaranka at usgs.gov>
>       ORCID: 0000-0003-2857-9600



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