Appel: DO 2014, Extended Deadline July 25, 2014
Thierry Hamon
hamon at LIMSI.FR
Tue Jul 15 19:51:31 UTC 2014
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 2014 15:33:04 -0400
From: "Selja Seppälä" <selja.seppala.unige at gmail.com>
Message-Id: <1954B34C-1F37-4DBD-A461-37EACE44A1B7 at buffalo.edu>
X-url: https://sites.google.com/site/definitionsinontologies/
Apologies for cross-posting
Please forward this message to colleagues in the areas of interest
EXTENDED DEADLINE: July 25, 2014
Second International Workshop on Definitions in Ontologies (DO 2014) at
the International Conference on Biomedical Ontologies (ICBO 2014)
October 6-7, 2014
Houston, USA
Website: https://sites.google.com/site/definitionsinontologies/
This workshop is a follow-up to the workshop on Definitions in
Ontologies (DO 2013) held last year in Montreal in conjunction with ICBO
2013. The focus of this second workshop is on definition practices in
either human or machine-assisted ontology development.
PRESENTATION
A current problem in ontology development is constructing the needed
definitions of terms either logical or in natural language. For example,
ontologies built using OBO Foundry principles are advised to include
both logical and natural language definitions, but ontology developers
too often focus on only one of these, or they pay insufficient attention
to whether they are equivalent.
Explicit definitions of terms in ontologies serve a number of
purposes. Logical definitions allow reasoners to create inferred
hierarchies, lessening the burden of asserting and checking the validity
of subsumptions. Natural language definitions help to ameliorate the
pervasive problem of low inter-annotator agreement. In specialized
domains, experts will know their own field well, but may only have
limited knowledge of adjacent disciplines. Good definitions make it
possible for non-experts to understand unfamiliar terms and thereby make
it possible for more confident reuse of terms by external ontologies,
which in turn facilitates data integration.
The goal of this workshop is to bring together interested researchers
and developers to explore these issues by presenting case studies in a
biomedical domain discussing the difficulties that arise when
constructing definitions with a view to sharing strategies in the
future. Even in the seemingly narrow domain of definition construction,
cross-fertilization from related disciplines should yield benefits in
quality and help to identify novel approaches.
Papers submitted should include one or more case studies and raise
specific questions related to definitions with a link to a biomedical
domain. Reports on successful or unsuccessful methods are both
appropriate.
TOPICS
- experiences in formulating definitions
- tools that assist in definition editing, including collaborative
systems
- coordination of logical and textual definitions
- validation and quality control of definitions, e.g., checking that
definitions comply with the all/some form
- methods for constructing definitions from multiple sources
- use of controlled languages such as Rabbit or ACE for more
user-friendly logical definition creation
- use of templates to systematize definition creation
FORMAT AND OUTCOMES
This will be a half-day workshop with a selected mix of presentations
based on accepted papers. In order to promote discussion, each
presentation will be followed by a short response by a participant of
the workshop to be arranged in advance of the workshop.
This workshop will document findings on the workshop’s website
(https://sites.google.com/site/definitionsinontologies/). We expect
accepted papers to be published in the Journal of Biomedical Semantics
(JBS).
INTENDED AUDIENCE
- ontologists, tool developers, and domain experts whose work encounters
issues regarding definitions
- tool developers building definition- or ontology-authoring tools
- philosophers and logicians
- biomedical researchers working on definitions in nomenclatures such as
SNOMED
- computer scientists addressing these issues in languages like OWL
- NLP researchers working on definition extraction, generation, or
checking
- NLP/IR researchers reusing definitions produced for ontologies
SUBMISSIONS
All papers should include one or more case studies and raise specific
questions related to definitions with a link to a biomedical domain.
Papers should be between 5 and 10 pages long (rendered), excluding
references, formatted using the JBS templates at
http://www.jbiomedsem.com/authors/instructions/research#preparing-main-manuscript,
and submitted via EasyChair
(https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=do2014).
IMPORTANT DATES
Workshop paper submission EXTENDED DEADLINE: July 25, 2014
Notification of paper acceptance: August 15, 2014
Camera-ready copies for the proceedings: September 15, 2014
Workshops: October 6-7, 2014
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Selja Seppälä (University at Buffalo, USA)
Patrick Ray (University at Buffalo, USA)
Alan Ruttenberg (University at Buffalo, USA)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Nathalie Aussenac-Gilles (National Center for Scientific Research
(CNRS), France)
Mélanie Courtot (MBB Department Simon Fraser University and BC Public
Health Microbiology & Reference Laboratory, Canada)
Natalia Grabar (Université de Lille 3, France)
Janna Hastings (European Bioinformatics Institute, Cambridge, UK)
James Malone (European Bioinformatics Institute, Cambridge, UK)
Alexis Nasr (Aix Marseille Université, France)
Richard Power (The Open University, UK)
Allan Third (The Open University, UK)
SUPPORTED BY
The Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
The State University of New York at Buffalo
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