Blog for the September 2018 Seminar: Ontology is cool!

Our first speaker, Helen Lippell, is a freelance taxonomist and is an organiser of the annual Taxonomy Boot Camp in London.  She also works with organisation on constructing thesauri, ontologies and link data repositories.   As far as she is concerned, the point of ontology construction is to model the world to help meet business objectives, and that’s the practical angle from which she approached the topic.  Taxonomies and ontologies are strongly related.  Taxonomies are concerned with the relationships between the terms used in a domain, ontologies focus more on describing the things within the domain and the relationships between them.  Neither is inherently better: you choose what is appropriate for your business need.  An ontology offers greater capabilities and a gateway to machine reasoning, but if you don’t need those, the extra effort will not be worth it.  A taxonomy can provide the controlled vocabularies which help with navigation and search.

Using fascinating examples, Helen, listed a number of business scenarios in which ontologies can be helpful: information retrieval, classification, tagging and data manipulation.  She is doing a lot of work currently on an ontology that will help in content aggregation and filtering, automating a lot of processes that are currently manual.

Implementing an ontology project is not trivial.  It starts with a process of thoroughly understanding and modelling everything connected to the particular domain in which the project and business operate.  Information professionals are well suited to link between the people with technical skills and others who know the business better and can advocate for the end-users of these systems.

Finally, Helen discussed the software that can facilitate this work, both free and to be purchased.  Her talk was followed by an exercise where we produced our own model, with plenty of help and advice from the speakers. We looked at problems in London that we could help solve such as guiding visitors to London or a five-year ecology plan.  It was fun, although we were not quite up to achieving a high-quality product ready to change the world!

In the second part of the meeting, we heard from Silver Oliver, an information architect.  Again, there was a short talk and then a practical exercise.   We learnt that Domain Modelling is fundamental to compiling successful taxonomies, controlled vocabularies and classifications schemes, as well as formal ontologies.  When you set out to model a domain, it is beneficial to engage as many voices and perspectives as possible.   It is helpful to do this before you start exploring tools and implementations so that you don’t exclude people from being able to participate with their different views and perspectives.   The exercise that followed looked at creating a website focusing on food and recipes, which was a pleasant topic to work on in our small groups.

The seminar finished with a set of recommendations:

  • Don’t dive into software: start with whiteboards.
  • Don’t work alone data modelling in the corner. Domain modelling is all about understanding he domain, through conversation and building shared language.
  • Be wary of getting inspiration from other models you believe to be similar. Start with conversations instead – though stealing ideas ca be useful!
  • Rather than ‘working closed’ and revealing your results at the end – keep the processes open and show people what you are doing.
  • An evolving ontology of the domain is a good way to capture these discussions and agreements about what things mean.
  • Rather than evolving a humongous monolithic domain model which is hard to get your head around, work with smaller domains with bounded contexts.

That led to a break with refreshments and general conversations based on our experiences during the afternoon.

Extract from a report by Conrad Taylor.

If you want to read the full account of this seminar – follow this link:

https://www.conradiator.com/kidmm/netikx-ontology-domains-sept2018.html

September 2018 Seminar: Ontologies and domain modelling: a fun (honest!) and friendly introduction

Summary

At this lively meeting Helen Lippell and Silver Oliver introduced ontologies and explained how they could be used. Michael Smethurst and Anya Somerville ran an interactive practical session

Speakers

Helen Lippell has run her own consultancy since 2007, working as a specialist in taxonomy, metadata, ontologies and enterprise search. She loves getting stuck into projects and working with clients to figure out how best to use the messy content and data they have. She has supported organisations such as the BBC, gov.uk, Financial Times, Pearson, and Electronic Arts.
Silver Oliver has worked as an Information Architect for many years. Previously he has worked with the BBC, British Library and government. For the last 10 years he has worked at Data Language, a small consultancy specialising in semantics. His areas of expertise include all areas of information architecture but focuses primarily on the role of domain modelling in delivering design solutions.
Michael Smethurst has worked as an Information Architect for over ten years. Prior to working for the UK Parliament, he worked at the BBC and BBC R&D on a variety of projects, ranging from programmes, iPlayer, news, sport and food. Here he brought together practices from the semantic web and the domain-driven design community. He now works as a data architect for the UK Parliament using the same methods to understand and document parliamentary processes, work flows and data flows.
Anya Somerville is Head of Indexing and Data Management for the House of Commons Library, where she leads a team of information specialists. The team adds subject indexing, links and other metadata to parliamentary business data. It also manages Parliament’s controlled vocabulary. Anya and her team work closely with Michael and Silver on the domain models for parliamentary business. A pdf flyer for this meeting can be downloaded from the link Ontologies and domain modelling

Time and Venue

2pm on 20th September 2018, The British Dental Association, 64 Wimpole Street, London W1G 8YS

Pre Event Information

What exactly is an ontology? How can we use them to better understand our information environments? Helen Lippell and Silver Oliver will be explaining all, providing examples from projects they have worked on, and giving you the chance to build your own ontology and domain model. Helen will give an accessible introduction to what ontologies are, how they are being used in a variety of different applications, how they differ from taxonomies, and how you can combine taxonomies and ontologies in models. This introduction assumes no prior knowledge of ontologies or semantic technologies.
Silver will be explaining how ontologies are used in domain modelling, demystifying some of the terminology, and providing case studies to demonstrate ontologies in practice. There will be the chance to get pens and paper out to produce and develop your own ontology and domain model, with additional help from experienced domain modellers Michael and Anya. You will learn the basic ideas around ontologies and domain modelling and see how ontologies can be used to better understand our information environments. You will begin to learn how to develop and use ontologies

Slides

Slides available.

Tweets

#netikx94

Blog

See our blog report: Ontologies and Domain Modelling

Study Suggestions

Take a look at the Simple Knowledge Organization System Namespace Document

https://www.w3.org/2009/08/skos-reference/skos.html