Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
tage, across England. Follow us: Facebook<https://www.facebook.com/HistoricEngland> | Twitter<https://twitter.com/HistoricEngland> | Instagram<https://www.instagram.com/historicengland/> Sign up to our newsletter<http://bit.ly/1p49z1e> Help us create a list of the 100 places which tell England's remarkable story and its impact on the world. A History of England in 100 Places<https://historicengland.org.uk/100places> sponsored by Ecclesiastical<http://www.ecclesiastical.com/fororganisations/insurance/heritageinsurance/100-places/index.aspx>. This e-mail (and any attachments) is confidential and may contain personal views which are not the views of Historic England unless specifically stated. If you have received it in error, please delete it from your system and notify the sender immediately. Do not use, copy or disclose the information in any way nor act in reliance on it. Any information sent to Historic England may become publicly available. From: Crm-sig [mailto:crm-sig-boun...@ics.forth.gr] On Behalf Of Gordon Dunsire Sent: 18 January 2018 09:22 To: 'Robert Sanderson'; 'Richard Light'; 'Jim Salmons'; crm-sig@ics.forth.gr Subject: Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF All It is for this reason that the IFLA declaration of URIs for the FRBRoo extension to CRM drops the name, and uses only the notation: http://metadataregistry.org/schemaprop/list/schema_id/94.html Cheers Gordon From: Crm-sig [mailto:crm-sig-boun...@ics.forth.gr]<mailto:[mailto:crm-sig-boun...@ics.forth.gr]> On Behalf Of Robert Sanderson Sent: 17 January 2018 16:52 To: Richard Light mailto:rich...@light.demon.co.uk>>; Jim Salmons mailto:jim.salm...@factminers.org>>; crm-sig@ics.forth.gr<mailto:crm-sig@ics.forth.gr> Subject: Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF Here’s a quick addition … The RDF representation uses the names of the classes and predicates in the URIs that identify them. This means ;l that when the names change, the URIs change and this invalidates all of the previous uses. As the SIG considers only the number to be important, there is a mismatch of expectations around persistence and versioning. Examples: E78_Collection versus E78_Curated_Holding and the recent thread about renaming translation_of. Rob From: Crm-sig mailto:crm-sig-boun...@ics.forth.gr>> on behalf of Richard Light mailto:rich...@light.demon.co.uk>> Date: Wednesday, January 17, 2018 at 3:46 AM To: Jim Salmons mailto:jim.salm...@factminers.org>>, "crm-sig@ics.forth.gr<mailto:crm-sig@ics.forth.gr>" mailto:crm-sig@ics.forth.gr>> Subject: Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF Jim, Thank you for the encouragement. I have put the document in its current form at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zCGZ4iBzekcEYo4Dy0hI8CrZ7dTkMD2rJaxavtEOET0/edit?usp=sharing and it is editable by anyone with the link. As you'll see, there is little that is new in there (although there might already be things to argue about!), but there is the outline of a more substantive document. All suggestions and contributions gratefully received. Richard On 16/01/2018 23:42, Jim Salmons wrote: Richard and SIG members, On 16/01/2018, Richard Light wrote [rest of thread snipped for brevity]: “I have started an "issues with RDF" document, but on reflection it may be more constructive to make it into a first attempt at the guidance I am asking for. I'll spend this afternoon pulling together material which I can easily find (e.g. the introductory comments in the RDF Schema document), and see what questions that exercise answers.” The recent flurry of conversation relating to the interplay of #cidocCRM and #RDF is most interesting and timely, both to me personally and, I believe, to the larger SIG mission of championing our model’s utility to those who are interested but hesitant to explore and adopt it in practice. == On the "Big Picture" Community Level... == 1. Richard, I would be very interested to see your working document mentioned above as soon as it is available and would love to be involved in its draft evolution as I would qualify as a highly-motivated non-expert reader with good writing/editing skills. 2. I know that this mailing list is very focused on the "tight" conversations of core and significant modeling issues and their resolution. Given that wrestling with "#cidocCRM in #RDF" is itself a gnarly domain that will likely engender its own level of detailed conversation, and given that the SIG is currently having an in-person meeting on current issues and future directions, might it be appropriate, via the energy and interest at the current meeting, to form a Working Group on this topic and spawn its own mailing list with a charter to explore this topic and come back to the
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
All It is for this reason that the IFLA declaration of URIs for the FRBRoo extension to CRM drops the name, and uses only the notation: http://metadataregistry.org/schemaprop/list/schema_id/94.html Cheers Gordon From: Crm-sig [mailto:crm-sig-boun...@ics.forth.gr] On Behalf Of Robert Sanderson Sent: 17 January 2018 16:52 To: Richard Light ; Jim Salmons ; crm-sig@ics.forth.gr Subject: Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF Here’s a quick addition … The RDF representation uses the names of the classes and predicates in the URIs that identify them. This means ;l that when the names change, the URIs change and this invalidates all of the previous uses. As the SIG considers only the number to be important, there is a mismatch of expectations around persistence and versioning. Examples: E78_Collection versus E78_Curated_Holding and the recent thread about renaming translation_of. Rob From: Crm-sig mailto:crm-sig-boun...@ics.forth.gr> > on behalf of Richard Light mailto:rich...@light.demon.co.uk> > List-Post: crm-sig@ics.forth.gr Date: Wednesday, January 17, 2018 at 3:46 AM To: Jim Salmons mailto:jim.salm...@factminers.org> >, "crm-sig@ics.forth.gr <mailto:crm-sig@ics.forth.gr> " mailto:crm-sig@ics.forth.gr> > Subject: Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF Jim, Thank you for the encouragement. I have put the document in its current form at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zCGZ4iBzekcEYo4Dy0hI8CrZ7dTkMD2rJaxavtEOET0/edit?usp=sharing and it is editable by anyone with the link. As you'll see, there is little that is new in there (although there might already be things to argue about!), but there is the outline of a more substantive document. All suggestions and contributions gratefully received. Richard On 16/01/2018 23:42, Jim Salmons wrote: Richard and SIG members, On 16/01/2018, Richard Light wrote [rest of thread snipped for brevity]: “I have started an "issues with RDF" document, but on reflection it may be more constructive to make it into a first attempt at the guidance I am asking for. I'll spend this afternoon pulling together material which I can easily find (e.g. the introductory comments in the RDF Schema document), and see what questions that exercise answers.” The recent flurry of conversation relating to the interplay of #cidocCRM and #RDF is most interesting and timely, both to me personally and, I believe, to the larger SIG mission of championing our model’s utility to those who are interested but hesitant to explore and adopt it in practice. == On the "Big Picture" Community Level... == 1. Richard, I would be very interested to see your working document mentioned above as soon as it is available and would love to be involved in its draft evolution as I would qualify as a highly-motivated non-expert reader with good writing/editing skills. 2. I know that this mailing list is very focused on the "tight" conversations of core and significant modeling issues and their resolution. Given that wrestling with "#cidocCRM in #RDF" is itself a gnarly domain that will likely engender its own level of detailed conversation, and given that the SIG is currently having an in-person meeting on current issues and future directions, might it be appropriate, via the energy and interest at the current meeting, to form a Working Group on this topic and spawn its own mailing list with a charter to explore this topic and come back to the full SIG with draft documents (e.g. the afore-mentioned "primer") and recommendations in response to its charter? If such a working group were to be formed, I would very much like to be involved. Putting on my "marketing hat" for a moment, I believe that the better we address #cidocCRM in #RDF, especially in terms of practical and example-based documentation and learning materials, that this will be the most important initiative we can take at this time to advance the adoption of the #cidocCRM in deployed and new #LOD systems/collections. Happy-Healthy Vibes to All and a Happy New Year, -: Jim:- www.researchgate.net/profile/Jim_Salmons <http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jim_Salmons> www.medium.com/@Jim_Salmons/ <http://www.medium.com/@Jim_Salmons/> (my #CognitiveComputing/#DigitalHumanities articles) P.S. As a postscript, I provide these comments with regard to my own personal learning and research experience... == Optional on my Personal Interest in #cidocCRM & #RDF == At a personal level, some in the SIG know that I am a U.S.-based independent (and untrained) #CitizenScientist working my post-cancer #PayItForward Bonus Rounds to contribute my best efforts at the intersection of #DigitalHumanities and #CognitiveComputing. As a “software guy” I spent the bulk of my career as a Smalltalk develope
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
On Jan 16, 2018 10:07 AM, "Richard Light" wrote: I think the principle is valid, but rdfs:label is a property, not a class, so I think that "rdfs:label" should be replaced by "rdf:literal" (or possibly "rdf:plainLiteral"[1]) in the above text. The point I assume that Martin is making is that the value of a *P1_is_identified_by *property can be finessed into a string if you have nothing more interesting to say about that value. Some brief RDF / RDFS / OWL notes: 1: The IRI rdf:Literal refers to the set of all possible concrete data values (e.g. - the real number [1] - the floating point value [1] - the temperature [1°C] - the string (sequence of characters) ['o','n','e'], or ['1'] - a string with an associated natural language tag [<["one"] , ["en"]>] or [<["one"], ["de"]>] - the English word [*one*] It is the top datatype in OWL, and can be used to restrict a property's range in rdfs; however it is usually possible to specify a more precise type. 2: RDF 1.1 removed the concept of Plain Literals (which were literals in an RDF document that had no specified datatype, and which may or may not have a language tag). The type rdf:PlainLiteral was introduced by the OWL working group (at a time when there was no RDF working group), which was mostly ignored when the RDF 1.1 working group was formed. RDF 1.1 added a new datatype, rdf:langString, which (sort of) denotes the set of all strings with an associated language tag. A langString MUST have a non-empty language tag. PlainLiteral can be approximated as the union of xsd:string and rdf:langString. The values of langString (and appropriate subset of PlainLiteral) are pairs of strings; there is an extra level of interpretation required to turn them into natural language utterances, but this can be as simple as displaying the string to a user. There need not be a valid interpretation (e.g. the string may not correspond to an utterance in the indicated language). If the range of a property is intended to be interpretable as natural language utterances then langString (or a defined OWL datatype restricting PlainLiteral to have a non-empty language tag) is usually a good choice. If a property has string values that do not correspond to a natural language utterance, then using a range of xsd:string is appropriate. If a property can have values which are strings that may or may not have language tags, then PlainLiteral may be appropriate; however this does not distinguish between strings in an unknown or unspecified natural language, and strings which are Just Strings. In situations like this it may be useful to define objects to serve as value holders. Doing so can also allow for more detailed restrictions in OWL (e.g. requiring the preferred label for a Concept in a given KOS to be unique for a given language). 3: rdfs:label is an annotation property, which means that it should be used to add metadata describing things in an ontology document, rather than the things the ontology is about. As a consequence of this, any rdfs:label assertions are completely ignored by OWL direct semantics ; there are only three axioms that can be used when defining annotation properties (subproperty, domain, and range). Even these are invisible to a direct semantics reasoner (though they can be used by editors and other tools). 4: Simple Literals... orz
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
Here’s a quick addition … The RDF representation uses the names of the classes and predicates in the URIs that identify them. This means that when the names change, the URIs change and this invalidates all of the previous uses. As the SIG considers only the number to be important, there is a mismatch of expectations around persistence and versioning. Examples: E78_Collection versus E78_Curated_Holding and the recent thread about renaming translation_of. Rob From: Crm-sig on behalf of Richard Light Date: Wednesday, January 17, 2018 at 3:46 AM To: Jim Salmons , "crm-sig@ics.forth.gr" Subject: Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF Jim, Thank you for the encouragement. I have put the document in its current form at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zCGZ4iBzekcEYo4Dy0hI8CrZ7dTkMD2rJaxavtEOET0/edit?usp=sharing and it is editable by anyone with the link. As you'll see, there is little that is new in there (although there might already be things to argue about!), but there is the outline of a more substantive document. All suggestions and contributions gratefully received. Richard On 16/01/2018 23:42, Jim Salmons wrote: Richard and SIG members, On 16/01/2018, Richard Light wrote [rest of thread snipped for brevity]: “I have started an "issues with RDF" document, but on reflection it may be more constructive to make it into a first attempt at the guidance I am asking for. I'll spend this afternoon pulling together material which I can easily find (e.g. the introductory comments in the RDF Schema document), and see what questions that exercise answers.” The recent flurry of conversation relating to the interplay of #cidocCRM and #RDF is most interesting and timely, both to me personally and, I believe, to the larger SIG mission of championing our model’s utility to those who are interested but hesitant to explore and adopt it in practice. == On the "Big Picture" Community Level... == 1. Richard, I would be very interested to see your working document mentioned above as soon as it is available and would love to be involved in its draft evolution as I would qualify as a highly-motivated non-expert reader with good writing/editing skills. 2. I know that this mailing list is very focused on the "tight" conversations of core and significant modeling issues and their resolution. Given that wrestling with "#cidocCRM in #RDF" is itself a gnarly domain that will likely engender its own level of detailed conversation, and given that the SIG is currently having an in-person meeting on current issues and future directions, might it be appropriate, via the energy and interest at the current meeting, to form a Working Group on this topic and spawn its own mailing list with a charter to explore this topic and come back to the full SIG with draft documents (e.g. the afore-mentioned "primer") and recommendations in response to its charter? If such a working group were to be formed, I would very much like to be involved. Putting on my "marketing hat" for a moment, I believe that the better we address #cidocCRM in #RDF, especially in terms of practical and example-based documentation and learning materials, that this will be the most important initiative we can take at this time to advance the adoption of the #cidocCRM in deployed and new #LOD systems/collections. Happy-Healthy Vibes to All and a Happy New Year, -: Jim:- www.researchgate.net/profile/Jim_Salmons<http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jim_Salmons> www.medium.com/@Jim_Salmons/<http://www.medium.com/@Jim_Salmons/> (my #CognitiveComputing/#DigitalHumanities articles) P.S. As a postscript, I provide these comments with regard to my own personal learning and research experience... == Optional on my Personal Interest in #cidocCRM & #RDF == At a personal level, some in the SIG know that I am a U.S.-based independent (and untrained) #CitizenScientist working my post-cancer #PayItForward Bonus Rounds to contribute my best efforts at the intersection of #DigitalHumanities and #CognitiveComputing. As a “software guy” I spent the bulk of my career as a Smalltalk developer and was particularly active during the initial wave of the software patterns movement. I was drawn to the #cidocCRM through my desire to apply ideas for metamodel-driven design of “self-descriptive executable model” frameworks from my prior Smalltalk work. I want to apply these ideas to my research that takes advantage of the emerging technology of graph databases. As a “pure OOP” Smalltalker, I had a “knee-jerk” reaction of disinterest in #RDF as its level of detail in notation reminded me too much of what we “pure OOPers” felt about the object-orientedness of C++ and Java. I have been using Neo4j’s property graph database for my initial applied research but lately beca
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
Jim, Thank you for the encouragement. I have put the document in its current form at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zCGZ4iBzekcEYo4Dy0hI8CrZ7dTkMD2rJaxavtEOET0/edit?usp=sharing and it is editable by anyone with the link. As you'll see, there is little that is new in there (although there might already be things to argue about!), but there is the outline of a more substantive document. All suggestions and contributions gratefully received. Richard On 16/01/2018 23:42, Jim Salmons wrote: > Richard and SIG members, > > On 16/01/2018, Richard Light wrote [rest of thread snipped for brevity]: > >“I have started an "issues with RDF" document, but on reflection it > may be more constructive to make it into a first attempt at the guidance I am > asking for. I'll spend this afternoon pulling together material which I can > easily find (e.g. the introductory comments in the RDF Schema document), and > see what questions that exercise answers.” > > The recent flurry of conversation relating to the interplay of #cidocCRM and > #RDF is most interesting and timely, both to me personally and, I believe, to > the larger SIG mission of championing our model’s utility to those who are > interested but hesitant to explore and adopt it in practice. > > == On the "Big Picture" Community Level... == > > 1. Richard, I would be very interested to see your working document mentioned > above as soon as it is available and would love to be involved in its draft > evolution as I would qualify as a highly-motivated non-expert reader with > good writing/editing skills. > > 2. I know that this mailing list is very focused on the "tight" conversations > of core and significant modeling issues and their resolution. Given that > wrestling with "#cidocCRM in #RDF" is itself a gnarly domain that will likely > engender its own level of detailed conversation, and given that the SIG is > currently having an in-person meeting on current issues and future > directions, might it be appropriate, via the energy and interest at the > current meeting, to form a Working Group on this topic and spawn its own > mailing list with a charter to explore this topic and come back to the full > SIG with draft documents (e.g. the afore-mentioned "primer") and > recommendations in response to its charter? If such a working group were to > be formed, I would very much like to be involved. > > Putting on my "marketing hat" for a moment, I believe that the better we > address #cidocCRM in #RDF, especially in terms of practical and example-based > documentation and learning materials, that this will be the most important > initiative we can take at this time to advance the adoption of the #cidocCRM > in deployed and new #LOD systems/collections. > > Happy-Healthy Vibes to All and a Happy New Year, > -: Jim:- > > www.researchgate.net/profile/Jim_Salmons > www.medium.com/@Jim_Salmons/ (my #CognitiveComputing/#DigitalHumanities > articles) > > P.S. As a postscript, I provide these comments with regard to my own personal > learning and research experience... > > == Optional on my Personal Interest in #cidocCRM & #RDF == > > At a personal level, some in the SIG know that I am a U.S.-based independent > (and untrained) #CitizenScientist working my post-cancer #PayItForward Bonus > Rounds to contribute my best efforts at the intersection of > #DigitalHumanities and #CognitiveComputing. As a “software guy” I spent the > bulk of my career as a Smalltalk developer and was particularly active during > the initial wave of the software patterns movement. I was drawn to the > #cidocCRM through my desire to apply ideas for metamodel-driven design of > “self-descriptive executable model” frameworks from my prior Smalltalk work. > I want to apply these ideas to my research that takes advantage of the > emerging technology of graph databases. As a “pure OOP” Smalltalker, I had a > “knee-jerk” reaction of disinterest in #RDF as its level of detail in > notation reminded me too much of what we “pure OOPers” felt about the > object-orientedness of C++ and Java. > > I have been using Neo4j’s property graph database for my initial applied > research but lately became disenchanted with it. As I surveyed my > technology-provider options, I decided that my piqued interest in Linked Open > Data warranted a reevaluation of #RDF and the available triple store products > as a means to pursue my work in development of the MAGAZINE #GTS > (ground-truth storage) format based on a #cidocCRM/FRBRoo/PRESSoo ontological > “stack.” > > I am now fully committed to redirecting my #cidocCRM-based research platform > around #RDF (along w/ #TEI) primarily for these three reasons: > > * I found Ontotext's GraphDB to be an excellent company and technology, > both in its principal product and in its all-important documentation, > self-driven learning resources, and its helpful tech support community. > > * Once I was
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
Richard and SIG members, On 16/01/2018, Richard Light wrote [rest of thread snipped for brevity]: “I have started an "issues with RDF" document, but on reflection it may be more constructive to make it into a first attempt at the guidance I am asking for. I'll spend this afternoon pulling together material which I can easily find (e.g. the introductory comments in the RDF Schema document), and see what questions that exercise answers.” The recent flurry of conversation relating to the interplay of #cidocCRM and #RDF is most interesting and timely, both to me personally and, I believe, to the larger SIG mission of championing our model’s utility to those who are interested but hesitant to explore and adopt it in practice. == On the "Big Picture" Community Level... == 1. Richard, I would be very interested to see your working document mentioned above as soon as it is available and would love to be involved in its draft evolution as I would qualify as a highly-motivated non-expert reader with good writing/editing skills. 2. I know that this mailing list is very focused on the "tight" conversations of core and significant modeling issues and their resolution. Given that wrestling with "#cidocCRM in #RDF" is itself a gnarly domain that will likely engender its own level of detailed conversation, and given that the SIG is currently having an in-person meeting on current issues and future directions, might it be appropriate, via the energy and interest at the current meeting, to form a Working Group on this topic and spawn its own mailing list with a charter to explore this topic and come back to the full SIG with draft documents (e.g. the afore-mentioned "primer") and recommendations in response to its charter? If such a working group were to be formed, I would very much like to be involved. Putting on my "marketing hat" for a moment, I believe that the better we address #cidocCRM in #RDF, especially in terms of practical and example-based documentation and learning materials, that this will be the most important initiative we can take at this time to advance the adoption of the #cidocCRM in deployed and new #LOD systems/collections. Happy-Healthy Vibes to All and a Happy New Year, -: Jim:- www.researchgate.net/profile/Jim_Salmons www.medium.com/@Jim_Salmons/ (my #CognitiveComputing/#DigitalHumanities articles) P.S. As a postscript, I provide these comments with regard to my own personal learning and research experience... == Optional on my Personal Interest in #cidocCRM & #RDF == At a personal level, some in the SIG know that I am a U.S.-based independent (and untrained) #CitizenScientist working my post-cancer #PayItForward Bonus Rounds to contribute my best efforts at the intersection of #DigitalHumanities and #CognitiveComputing. As a “software guy” I spent the bulk of my career as a Smalltalk developer and was particularly active during the initial wave of the software patterns movement. I was drawn to the #cidocCRM through my desire to apply ideas for metamodel-driven design of “self-descriptive executable model” frameworks from my prior Smalltalk work. I want to apply these ideas to my research that takes advantage of the emerging technology of graph databases. As a “pure OOP” Smalltalker, I had a “knee-jerk” reaction of disinterest in #RDF as its level of detail in notation reminded me too much of what we “pure OOPers” felt about the object-orientedness of C++ and Java. I have been using Neo4j’s property graph database for my initial applied research but lately became disenchanted with it. As I surveyed my technology-provider options, I decided that my piqued interest in Linked Open Data warranted a reevaluation of #RDF and the available triple store products as a means to pursue my work in development of the MAGAZINE #GTS (ground-truth storage) format based on a #cidocCRM/FRBRoo/PRESSoo ontological “stack.” I am now fully committed to redirecting my #cidocCRM-based research platform around #RDF (along w/ #TEI) primarily for these three reasons: * I found Ontotext's GraphDB to be an excellent company and technology, both in its principal product and in its all-important documentation, self-driven learning resources, and its helpful tech support community. * Once I was "bitten" by GraphDB, I began an intensive effort to come up to speed on #RDF through self-study and found the most incredibly-written and super-helpful book, "Semantic Web for the Working Ontologist: Effective Modeling in RDFS and OWL, 2nd Edition" by Dean Allemang and James Hendler (book companion website http://www.workingontologist.org). * My interest in software patterns led me to Pascal Hitzler (http://www.pascal-hitzler.de/) and the ODPA, the Association for Ontology Design & Patterns and their website at http://ontologydesignpatterns.org with associated Google group mailing list at this shortened URL https://goo.gl/x6MJjM.
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
Hi Richard, all, In linked.art, we of course ran into this issue too! We ended up going for rdf:value for *all* values in the model for consistency, lacking another way to associate values with Appellations and Linguistic Objects, in particular. For example, see [1] We discussed using p3_has_note, as a predicate for capturing arbitrary values, but it runs into three major problems out of the gate: - It’s for “informal description that have not been expressed in terms of CRM constructs” and Appellation / Linguistic Object are clearly CRM constructs - It would ambiguous with other uses of P3 without P3.1, and RDF does not allow relationships on relationships. The cost of using reification to express a string is clearly far too expensive for p3 to work. - E90 adds a use of P3 as “The property P3 has note allows for the description of this content model” … rather than the actual value of the resource. What would make us change our minds and use a CRM construct instead of rdf:value? A has_value property that covered Appellations and Linguistic Objects… which would mean that it could be associated with E90 Symbolic Object, with a scope note saying that it is the set of “identifiable symbols” that makes up the resource. Hope that helps! Rob [1] http://linked.art/model/object/identity/#titles From: Crm-sig on behalf of Richard Light Date: Monday, January 15, 2018 at 3:12 PM To: "crm-sig@ics.forth.gr" Subject: Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF On 15/01/2018 19:52, Martin Doerr wrote: Right. We have often discussed it, but I am not sure if we have written a guideline, and it is not in the right place, or if we have only exchanged e-mails about it. I put is as an issue, in case its new. The point is that we cannot make rdf label a subproperty of p1. More generally, I would argue that there should be clear guidance on the whole subject of "implementing an RDF instantiation of the CRM". I was very pleased with the guidance for recording dates which we recently worked on, and assumed that was just an outlier which had been missed up to now. If we are seriously expecting implementors to produce RDF solutions which embody the CRM, we must provide them with comprehensive and specific guidance - maybe a range of implementation options. In my understanding of it, the problem areas are mostly at the "sharp end" where the actual data comes in. Best wishes, Richard best, martin On 1/15/2018 6:33 PM, Richard Light wrote: Hi, It's perhaps telling that I even have to ask this question at this stage in the game. I'm not sure how to encode a person's name in RDF in a CRM-compliant manner. It's an E41 Appellation, and is linked to the person by a P1_is_identified_by property, I'm assuming. So far, so good. However, it looks as though I have the choice of not stating that it is an E41, or of connecting the E41 to its string value via a property which is nowhere defined in the CRM: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by "Light, Thomas Edward" . or: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by [ a crm:E41_Appellation; {has-string-value} "Light, Thomas Edward" ] . The CRM definition gives strings as examples of E41, which implies that the first form is acceptable. However, my instinct says that it is wrong to finesse the fact that it is an E41 in this way. If the E41 is to be expressed, as in my second form, I would welcome advice as to what the value of "{has-string-value}" should be. Whichever approach is correct, I am struck by the absence of a primer which says, in straightforward terms, "this is how you encode CRM concepts in RDF". If it exists and I have simply missed it, please point me in its direction and I will spread the word ... Best wishes, Richard -- Richard Light ___ Crm-sig mailing list Crm-sig@ics.forth.gr<mailto:Crm-sig@ics.forth.gr> http://lists.ics.forth.gr/mailman/listinfo/crm-sig -- -- Dr. Martin Doerr | Vox:+30(2810)391625| Research Director | Fax:+30(2810)391638| | Email: mar...@ics.forth.gr<mailto:mar...@ics.forth.gr> | | Center for Cultural Informatics | Information Systems Laboratory| Institute of Computer Science| Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas (FORTH) | | N.Plastira 100, Vassilika Vouton, | GR70013 Heraklion,Crete,Greece |
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
On 16/01/2018 13:07, Maria Theodoridou wrote: > > Dear all, > > As being very much involved with mappings to the RDF implementation of > CRM I would benefit a lot from /clear guidance on the whole subject of > "implementing an RDF instantiation of the CRM"/ as Richard states. > I have started an "issues with RDF" document, but on reflection it may be more constructive to make it into a first attempt at the guidance I am asking for. I'll spend this afternoon pulling together material which I can easily find (e.g. the introductory comments in the RDF Schema document), and see what questions that exercise answers. > In CAA2016 we presented some Methodological tips for mappings to CIDOC > CRM and among others we (a.k.a. Martin) claim the following: > > 4.2 Common database fields: Appellations > The RDF class rdfs:label and CRM class E41 Appellation are > alternative implementations for the same concept in RDF, a > human-readable name for the subject. So, for simplicity, when > mapping contemporary names into RDF, we suggest the use of > rdfs:label tagged with a language attribute. The use of the > E41 Appellation class is required only if there is need to > assign some additional properties to the Appellation such as > properties of use or attribution. > > Instances of E41 Appellation “/are cultural constructs; as > such, they have a context, a history, and a use in time and > space by some group of users./” and thus E41 Appellation is > appropriate for historical names. > I think the principle is valid, but rdfs:label is a property, not a class, so I think that "rdfs:label" should be replaced by "rdf:literal" (or possibly "rdf:plainLiteral"[1]) in the above text. The point I assume that Martin is making is that the value of a /P1_is_identified_by /property can be finessed into a string if you have nothing more interesting to say about that value. > Since then, I got several times questions related to this issue and > apparently there are a few ways to deal with it. One recent e-mail > mentioned "we were advised to use E55_Type > P1_is_indentified_by > > E41_Appellation > P3_has_note > E62_String" and I was asked if this is > the way to go. This is the sort of endless class-property-class-... chain which leads me to question whether the CRM is an efficient way of solving an RDF implementation. :-) Using Martin's short-cut above, you could replace the last three elements of this expression by a string. (Unless, for example, you also want to say for example that the Appellation has an alternative form, in which case the full structure is required ... and useful.) (E55_Type is another question: I would like to tease out how we implement in RDF its stated role of representing "concepts denoted by terms from thesauri and controlled vocabularies".) > If I am not wrong, the different ways to approach this was the main > (probably the only) incompatibility between the Helculaneum data and > WissKI data in Tiblisi. George knows the details. Best wishes, Richard [1] https://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-plain-literal/ > > Looking forward to official guidelines, > > Best > Maria > > > On 16/1/2018 1:12 πμ, Richard Light wrote: >> >> On 15/01/2018 19:52, Martin Doerr wrote: >>> Right. We have often discussed it, but I am not sure if we have >>> written a guideline, and it is not in the right place, or if we have >>> only exchanged e-mails about it. >>> I put is as an issue, in case its new. The point is that we cannot >>> make rdf label a subproperty of p1. >> More generally, I would argue that there should be clear guidance on >> the whole subject of "implementing an RDF instantiation of the CRM". >> I was very pleased with the guidance for recording dates which we >> recently worked on, and assumed that was just an outlier which had >> been missed up to now. If we are seriously expecting implementors to >> produce RDF solutions which embody the CRM, we must provide them with >> comprehensive and specific guidance - maybe a range of implementation >> options. In my understanding of it, the problem areas are mostly at >> the "sharp end" where the actual data comes in. >> >> Best wishes, >> >> Richard >> >>> best, >>> >>> martin >>> >>> On 1/15/2018 6:33 PM, Richard Light wrote: Hi, It's perhaps telling that I even have to ask this question at this stage in the game. I'm not sure how to encode a person's name in RDF in a CRM-compliant manner. It's an E41 Appellation, and is linked to the person by a P1_is_identified_by property, I'm assuming. So far, so good. However, it looks as though I have the choice of not stating that it is an E41, or of connecting the E41 to its string value via a property which is nowhere defined in the CRM: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by "Light, Thomas Edward
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
Variants of this issue do come up often with people really trying to implement and indeed the lack of a consolidated implementation guide, to my knowledge, leads to incompatible implementations and this undermines the integration and interoperability we want to support. So I too think it should be raised as an issue. -- Original message--From: Maria TheodoridouDate: Tue, Jan 16, 2018 14:14To: crm-sig@ics.forth.gr;Cc: Subject:Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF Dear all,As being very much involved with mappings to the RDF implementation of CRM I would benefit a lot from clearguidance on the whole subject of "implementing an RDFinstantiation of the CRM" as Richard states.In CAA2016 we presented some Methodological tips for mappings to CIDOC CRM and among others we (a.k.a. Martin) claim the following: 4.2 Common database fields: Appellations The RDF class rdfs:label and CRM class E41 Appellation are alternative implementations for the same concept in RDF, a human-readable name for the subject. So, for simplicity, whenmapping contemporary names into RDF, we suggest the use ofrdfs:label tagged with a language attribute. The use of the E41Appellation class is required only if there is need to assignsome additional properties to the Appellation such as propertiesof use or attribution. Instances of E41 Appellation “are cultural constructs; as such, they have a context, a history, and a use in time and space by some group of users.” and thus E41 Appellation isappropriate for historical names. Since then, I got several times questions related to this issue andapparently there are a few ways to deal with it. One recent e-mail mentioned "we were advised to use E55_Type > P1_is_indentified_by> E41_Appellation > P3_has_note > E62_String" and I wasasked if this is the way to go. If I am not wrong, the different ways to approach this was the main (probably the only) incompatibility between the Helculaneum data andWissKI data in Tiblisi. George knows the details. Looking forward to official guidelines, Best Maria On 16/1/2018 1:12 πμ, Richard Light wrote: On 15/01/2018 19:52, Martin Doerrwrote: Right. We have often discussed it, but I am not sure if we have written a guideline, and it is not in the right place, or if we have only exchanged e-mails about it. I put is as an issue, in case its new. The point is that we cannot make rdf label a subproperty of p1. More generally, I would argue that there should be clear guidance on the whole subject of "implementing an RDF instantiation of the CRM". I was very pleased with the guidance for recording dates which we recently worked on, and assumed that was just an outlier which had been missed up to now. If we are seriously expecting implementors to produce RDF solutions which embody the CRM, we must provide them with comprehensive and specific guidance - maybe a range of implementation options. In my understanding of it, the problem areas are mostly at the "sharp end" where the actual data comes in. Best wishes, Richard best, martin On 1/15/2018 6:33 PM, Richard Light wrote: Hi, It's perhaps telling that I even have to ask this questionat this stage in the game. I'm not sure how to encode a person's name in RDF in a CRM-compliant manner. It's an E41 Appellation, and islinked to the person by a P1_is_identified_by property, I'massuming. So far, so good. However, it looks as though I have the choice of not stating that it is an E41, or of connecting the E41 to its string value via a property which is nowhere defined in theCRM: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by "Light, Thomas Edward" . or: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by [ a crm:E41_Appellation; {has-string-value} "Light, Thomas Edward" ] . The CRM definition gives strings as examples of E41, which implies that the first form is acceptable. However, my instinct says that it is wrong to finesse the fact that it is an E41 in this way. If the E41 is to be expressed, as in my second form, I would welcome advice as to what the value of "{has-string-value}" should be. Whichever approach is correct, I am struck by the absence of a primer which says, in stra
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
Dear all, As being very much involved with mappings to the RDF implementation of CRM I would benefit a lot from /clear guidance on the whole subject of "implementing an RDF instantiation of the CRM"/ as Richard states. In CAA2016 we presented some Methodological tips for mappings to CIDOC CRM and among others we (a.k.a. Martin) claim the following: 4.2 Common database fields: Appellations The RDF class rdfs:label and CRM class E41 Appellation are alternative implementations for the same concept in RDF, a human-readable name for the subject. So, for simplicity, when mapping contemporary names into RDF, we suggest the use of rdfs:label tagged with a language attribute. The use of the E41 Appellation class is required only if there is need to assign some additional properties to the Appellation such as properties of use or attribution. Instances of E41 Appellation “/are cultural constructs; as such, they have a context, a history, and a use in time and space by some group of users./” and thus E41 Appellation is appropriate for historical names. Since then, I got several times questions related to this issue and apparently there are a few ways to deal with it. One recent e-mail mentioned "we were advised to use E55_Type > P1_is_indentified_by > E41_Appellation > P3_has_note > E62_String" and I was asked if this is the way to go. If I am not wrong, the different ways to approach this was the main (probably the only) incompatibility between the Helculaneum data and WissKI data in Tiblisi. George knows the details. Looking forward to official guidelines, Best Maria On 16/1/2018 1:12 πμ, Richard Light wrote: On 15/01/2018 19:52, Martin Doerr wrote: Right. We have often discussed it, but I am not sure if we have written a guideline, and it is not in the right place, or if we have only exchanged e-mails about it. I put is as an issue, in case its new. The point is that we cannot make rdf label a subproperty of p1. More generally, I would argue that there should be clear guidance on the whole subject of "implementing an RDF instantiation of the CRM". I was very pleased with the guidance for recording dates which we recently worked on, and assumed that was just an outlier which had been missed up to now. If we are seriously expecting implementors to produce RDF solutions which embody the CRM, we must provide them with comprehensive and specific guidance - maybe a range of implementation options. In my understanding of it, the problem areas are mostly at the "sharp end" where the actual data comes in. Best wishes, Richard best, martin On 1/15/2018 6:33 PM, Richard Light wrote: Hi, It's perhaps telling that I even have to ask this question at this stage in the game. I'm not sure how to encode a person's name in RDF in a CRM-compliant manner. It's an E41 Appellation, and is linked to the person by a P1_is_identified_by property, I'm assuming. So far, so good. However, it looks as though I have the choice of not stating that it is an E41, or of connecting the E41 to its string value via a property which is nowhere defined in the CRM: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by "Light, Thomas Edward" . or: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by [ a crm:E41_Appellation; {has-string-value} "Light, Thomas Edward" ] . The CRM definition gives strings as examples of E41, which implies that the first form is acceptable. However, my instinct says that it is wrong to finesse the fact that it is an E41 in this way. If the E41 /is /to be expressed, as in my second form, I would welcome advice as to what the value of "{has-string-value}" should be. Whichever approach is correct, I am struck by the absence of a primer which says, in straightforward terms, "this is how you encode CRM concepts in RDF". If it exists and I have simply missed it, please point me in its direction and I will spread the word ... Best wishes, Richard -- *Richard Light* ___ Crm-sig mailing list Crm-sig@ics.forth.gr http://lists.ics.forth.gr/mailman/listinfo/crm-sig -- -- Dr. Martin Doerr | Vox:+30(2810)391625| Research Director | Fax:+30(2810)391638| | Email:mar...@ics.forth.gr | | Center for Cultural Informatics | Information Systems Laboratory| Institute of Computer Science| Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas (FORTH) | | N.Plastira 100, Vassilika Vouton,
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
On 15/01/2018 19:52, Martin Doerr wrote: > Right. We have often discussed it, but I am not sure if we have > written a guideline, and it is not in the right place, or if we have > only exchanged e-mails about it. > I put is as an issue, in case its new. The point is that we cannot > make rdf label a subproperty of p1. More generally, I would argue that there should be clear guidance on the whole subject of "implementing an RDF instantiation of the CRM". I was very pleased with the guidance for recording dates which we recently worked on, and assumed that was just an outlier which had been missed up to now. If we are seriously expecting implementors to produce RDF solutions which embody the CRM, we must provide them with comprehensive and specific guidance - maybe a range of implementation options. In my understanding of it, the problem areas are mostly at the "sharp end" where the actual data comes in. Best wishes, Richard > best, > > martin > > On 1/15/2018 6:33 PM, Richard Light wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> It's perhaps telling that I even have to ask this question at this >> stage in the game. >> >> I'm not sure how to encode a person's name in RDF in a CRM-compliant >> manner. It's an E41 Appellation, and is linked to the person by a >> P1_is_identified_by property, I'm assuming. So far, so good. >> >> However, it looks as though I have the choice of not stating that it >> is an E41, or of connecting the E41 to its string value via a >> property which is nowhere defined in the CRM: >> >> freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; >> crm:P1_is_identified_by "Light, Thomas Edward" . >> >> or: >> >> freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; >> crm:P1_is_identified_by [ >> a crm:E41_Appellation; >> {has-string-value} "Light, Thomas Edward" ] . >> >> The CRM definition gives strings as examples of E41, which implies >> that the first form is acceptable. However, my instinct says that it >> is wrong to finesse the fact that it is an E41 in this way. If the >> E41 /is /to be expressed, as in my second form, I would welcome >> advice as to what the value of "{has-string-value}" should be. >> >> Whichever approach is correct, I am struck by the absence of a primer >> which says, in straightforward terms, "this is how you encode CRM >> concepts in RDF". If it exists and I have simply missed it, please >> point me in its direction and I will spread the word ... >> >> Best wishes, >> >> Richard >> -- >> *Richard Light* >> >> >> ___ >> Crm-sig mailing list >> Crm-sig@ics.forth.gr >> http://lists.ics.forth.gr/mailman/listinfo/crm-sig > > > -- > -- > Dr. Martin Doerr | Vox:+30(2810)391625| > Research Director | Fax:+30(2810)391638| >| Email: mar...@ics.forth.gr | > | >Center for Cultural Informatics | >Information Systems Laboratory| > Institute of Computer Science| >Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas (FORTH) | > | >N.Plastira 100, Vassilika Vouton, | > GR70013 Heraklion,Crete,Greece | > | > Web-site: http://www.ics.forth.gr/isl | > -- > > > ___ > Crm-sig mailing list > Crm-sig@ics.forth.gr > http://lists.ics.forth.gr/mailman/listinfo/crm-sig -- *Richard Light*
Re: [Crm-sig] ISSUE Recording an E41 in RDF
Right. We have often discussed it, but I am not sure if we have written a guideline, and it is not in the right place, or if we have only exchanged e-mails about it. I put is as an issue, in case its new. The point is that we cannot make rdf label a subproperty of p1. best, martin On 1/15/2018 6:33 PM, Richard Light wrote: Hi, It's perhaps telling that I even have to ask this question at this stage in the game. I'm not sure how to encode a person's name in RDF in a CRM-compliant manner. It's an E41 Appellation, and is linked to the person by a P1_is_identified_by property, I'm assuming. So far, so good. However, it looks as though I have the choice of not stating that it is an E41, or of connecting the E41 to its string value via a property which is nowhere defined in the CRM: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by "Light, Thomas Edward" . or: freeukgen:b65432#born a crm:E21_Person; crm:P1_is_identified_by [ a crm:E41_Appellation; {has-string-value} "Light, Thomas Edward" ] . The CRM definition gives strings as examples of E41, which implies that the first form is acceptable. However, my instinct says that it is wrong to finesse the fact that it is an E41 in this way. If the E41 /is /to be expressed, as in my second form, I would welcome advice as to what the value of "{has-string-value}" should be. Whichever approach is correct, I am struck by the absence of a primer which says, in straightforward terms, "this is how you encode CRM concepts in RDF". If it exists and I have simply missed it, please point me in its direction and I will spread the word ... Best wishes, Richard -- *Richard Light* ___ Crm-sig mailing list Crm-sig@ics.forth.gr http://lists.ics.forth.gr/mailman/listinfo/crm-sig -- -- Dr. Martin Doerr | Vox:+30(2810)391625| Research Director | Fax:+30(2810)391638| | Email: mar...@ics.forth.gr | | Center for Cultural Informatics | Information Systems Laboratory| Institute of Computer Science| Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas (FORTH) | | N.Plastira 100, Vassilika Vouton, | GR70013 Heraklion,Crete,Greece | | Web-site: http://www.ics.forth.gr/isl | --