IN33F-01
Ontology Reuse in Geoscience Semantic Applications

Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 13:40
2020 (Moscone West)
Matthew S. Mayernik1, M. Benjamin Gross2, Michael D Daniels1, Linda R Rowan2, Don Stott1, Keith e Maull1, Huda Khan3 and Jon Corson-Rikert3, (1)National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, United States, (2)UNAVCO, Inc. Boulder, Boulder, CO, United States, (3)Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States
Abstract:
The tension between local ontology development and wider ontology connections is fundamental to the Semantic web. It is often unclear, however, what the key decision points should be for new semantic web applications in deciding when to reuse existing ontologies and when to develop original ontologies. In addition, with the growth of semantic web ontologies and applications, new semantic web applications can struggle to efficiently and effectively identify and select ontologies to reuse. This presentation will describe the ontology comparison, selection, and consolidation effort within the EarthCollab project. UCAR, Cornell University, and UNAVCO are collaborating on the EarthCollab project to use semantic web technologies to enable the discovery of the research output from a diverse array of projects. The EarthCollab project is using the VIVO Semantic web software suite to increase discoverability of research information and data related to the following two geoscience-based communities: (1) the Bering Sea Project, an interdisciplinary field program whose data archive is hosted by NCAR’s Earth Observing Laboratory (EOL), and (2) diverse research projects informed by geodesy through the UNAVCO geodetic facility and consortium.

This presentation will outline of EarthCollab use cases, and provide an overview of key ontologies being used, including the VIVO-Integrated Semantic Framework (VIVO-ISF), Global Change Information System (GCIS), and Data Catalog (DCAT) ontologies. We will discuss issues related to bringing these ontologies together to provide a robust ontological structure to support the EarthCollab use cases. It is rare that a single pre-existing ontology meets all of a new application’s needs. New projects need to stitch ontologies together in ways that fit into the broader semantic web ecosystem.