If one is interested in a functional “category” system, it would be very
helpful to have a good logic-based ontology as the backbone.

I haven’t looked recently, but when I inquired about the ontology used by
DBpedia a year ago, I was referred to “dbpedia-ontology.owl”, an ontology in
the format of the “semantic web” ontology format OWL.  The OWL format is
excellent for simple purposes, but the dbpedia-ontology.owl (at that time)
was not well-structured (being very polite).  I did inquire as to who was
maintaining the ontology, and had a hard time figuring out how to help bring
it up to professional standards.  But it was like punching jello, nothing to
grasp onto. I gave up, having other useful things to do with my time.

 

Perhaps it is time now, with more experience in hand, to rethink the
category system starting with basics.   This is not as hard as it sounds.
It may require some changes where there is ambiguity or logical
inconsistency, but mostly it only necessary to link the Wikipedia categories
to an  ontology based on a well-structured and logically sound foundation
ontology (also referred to as an “upper ontology”), that supplies the basic
categories and relations.  Such an ontology can provide the basic concepts,
whose labels can be translated into any terminology that any local user
wants to use.  There are several well-structured foundation ontologies,
based on over twenty years of research, but the one I suggest is the one I
am most familiar with (which I created over the past seven years), called
COSMO.  The files at http://micra.com/COSMO will provide the ontology itself
(“COSMO.owl”, in OWL) and papers describing the basic principles.    COSMO
is structured to be a “primitives-based foundation ontology”, containing all
of the “semantic primitives” needed to describe anything one wants to talk
about.   All other categories are structured as logical combinations of the
basic elements.  Its inventory of primitives is probably incomplete, but is
able to describe everything I have been concerned with for years (7000
categories and 800 relations thus far) can always be supplemented as
required for new fields.  With an OWL ontology, queries can be executed by
any of several logic-based utilities.  Making the query system easy for
those who prefer not to build SPARQL queries (including myself) would
require some programming, but that is a miniscule effort compared to what
has already been put into the DBPedia database.  Tools such as “Protégé”
make it easy to work with an OWL ontology, and there is a web site where an
OWL ontology can be developed collaboratively.

 

I will be willing to put some effort into this and assist anyone who wants
to used the COSMO ontology for this project.   If those who are in charge of
maintaining the ontology (is anyone?) would like to discuss this at greater
length, send me an email or telephone me.  All those who are interested in
this topic may also feel free to contact me, or to discuss this thread on
the list.   I suggest the thread title “Foundation Ontology”.

 

Pat

 

Patrick Cassidy

MICRA Inc.

cass...@micra.com

908-561-3416

 

From: wikidata-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikidata-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Michael Hale
Sent: Saturday, May 04, 2013 2:57 AM
To: Discussion list for the Wikidata project.
Subject: Re: [Wikidata-l] Question about wikipedia categories.

 

I think it's important to consider the distinction between a category system
and semantic queries. I think it's very likely that DBpedia and Wikidata
will converge over time and develop a simple enough query interface that
causes fewer people to use the category system because we will be able to
automatically generate relevant queries related to a given article. DBpedia
currently has a lot more data, but Wikidata is important for many editing
scenarios. Also, in the future I think there will be a lot of content
scenarios where it is natural to start by putting data into Wikidata and
then including it in articles instead of just extracting information from
articles. If you are familiar with query languages you can get comfortable
with the DBpedia SPARQL examples in a few minutes, but for a typical reader
that just wants to go from an article about a person to a list of similar
people it is hard to beat scrolling down and just clicking on a category. I
did a test query on DBpedia to plot all sports cars by their engine sizes,
and I think for the types of things it enables you to do it is totally worth
the learning curve. That being said, I think the category system has a lot
of potential for better browsing scenarios as opposed to queries. I've been
making a tool that mixes the article view data with the category system. You
can see a video of the basic idea here and a screenshot of football league
popularity split by language.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Wakebrdkid/Popular_category_browsing I'm
currently multiplying the Chinese traffic by 30 to try and account for Baidu
Baike.

> Date: Sat, 4 May 2013 08:14:54 +0200
> From: jane...@gmail.com
> To: wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org
> Subject: Re: [Wikidata-l] Question about wikipedia categories.
> 
> Wondering exactly the same thing - my frustrations with categories
> began about three years ago and it seems I am surprised monthly by
> severe limitations to this outdated apparatus. I am a heavy category
> user, but I would love to be able to kick it out the door in favour of
> a more structured method. As far as I can tell, there is very little
> synchronisation among language Wikipedias of category trees, and being
> able to apply a central structure to all Wikipedias through Wikidata
> sounds like a great idea, and one which would not disturb the current
> category trees we already have, but supplement them. As I see it, some
> category structures are OK, but when categories get big, people split
> them in non-standard ways, causing problems like this recent
> media-hype regarding female novellists. I think that it's great this
> is in the news in this way, because I am sure that most Wikipedia
> readers never knew we had categories, and this is a great introduction
> to them, as well as an invitation to edit Wikipedia.
> 
> 2013/5/4, Chris Maloney <voldr...@gmail.com>:
> > I am just curious if there has ever been discussion about the
> > potential for reimplementing / replacing the category system in
> > Wikipedia with semantic tagging in WikiData. It seem to me that the
> > recent kerfuffle with regards to "American women writers" would not
> > have happened if the pages were tagged with simple RDF assertions
> > instead of these convoluted categories. I know, of course, that it
> > would be a huge undertaking, but I just don't see how the category
> > system can continue to scale (I'm amazed it has scaled as well as it
> > has already, of course).
> >
> > I am trying to learn more about wikidata, and have perused the various
> > infos and FAQs for the last two hours, and can't find any discussion
> > of this particular issue.
> >
> > -- Chris
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Wikidata-l mailing list
> > Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org
> > https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l
> >
> 
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