Sorry, Bijan.  I should have been more clear.

My statement is predicated on the use of OWL 1.0 which some of us are still stuck using due to tools we've become committed to.

OWL 1.1 already provides some assistance in this realm of providing more flexible support for 'lexical localization'** potentially by using the added support for punning. I've not had a chance to go through this issue in any detail at this point, but I expect this could be done.

My sense is additional support is coming in OWL 2.0, if I recall from what I've read regarding the work being invested in this next version of OWL.

I would stress that whatever support gets added at the formal language level must have additional support in the various tools used to author and digest OWL ontologies. These issues of implementation are a part of what lies at the heart of this issue Matthias is documenting on that Wiki page.

Cheers,
Bill

** I'm using localization here in the same sense that it's used in the software development industry, when referring to the support provided in many software environments for multi-lingual "views" of GUI elements and strings via resources.


On May 29, 2007, at 12:02 AM, Bijan Parsia wrote:

On May 29, 2007, at 4:58 AM, William Bug wrote:

This is exactly the point I've been making for over a year now regarding use of SKOS in biomedical ontology development, and it is why we use SKOS:prefLabel for all classes in BIRNLex (as well as having the redundant rdfs:label for interoperability purposes). The "altLabel" provides a means not only to associate lexical variants but ultimately to create "namespace qualified" term sets or "views" of a single ontology with the terms tailored to the needs of a specific community. There would need to be an expansion of annotation support in OWL to fully implement this, but SKOS can provide a means to standard that method in the lexical domain, once the required annotation capabilities have been added to OWL.
[snip]

Would you mind explaining exactly what you need from the annotation capabilities? We have been discussing a fairly clean way to beef up OWL 1.1 annotations and I'd be curious to know if it handled this (important) case.

Cheers,
Bijan.

Bill Bug
Senior Research Analyst/Ontological Engineer

Laboratory for Bioimaging  & Anatomical Informatics
www.neuroterrain.org
Department of Neurobiology & Anatomy
Drexel University College of Medicine
2900 Queen Lane
Philadelphia, PA    19129
215 991 8430 (ph)
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