SV and Thesaurus - decide

From: Andrea Preite Martinez <andrea.preitemartinez-at-iasf-roma.inaf.it>
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2007 11:51:01 +0200


I think the subject of this discussion is becoming clearer: at the beginning I had the impression that we were watching different movies! :-)

Movie A is the SV as proposed in the draft paper. It is a (proposed) collection of standard, centrally defined and maintained list of tokens that allows to express any possible astronomical term, locally defined.
It is not specifically meant for humans, but human readable. There is no associated ontological structure. A simple basic grammar allows putting together SV tokens to express complex concepts or concatenation of concepts. It is not particularly devised to be a component of the user I/F of a searching tool, to help a user to refine his search.

Movie B is intended as *the* standard list of astronomical terms, centrally defined and maintained.
It is (also) meant for humans.
Its use within the VO needs to be clarified. Under discussion is the degree of ontological information to associate to the terms of such list.
The starting point to build it can be the old IAU Thesaurus. Much longer than Movie A, but size is not a problem.(see note below)

Movie A (the SV) is in the editing phase. For Movie B (the Thesaurus) we need a script and a producer. Well, enough with the movie metaphor!

I call for a decision on the SV draft.
After reading it, please post your opinion (possibly by the end of the september):

There are no other options as far as the SV is concerned.

The two topics are well separated: whichever decision we assume for the IVOA SV will not prevent us from deciding to start working on the IVOA Thesaurus. Actually, we did start already!!

Andrea

Note:
What could become a size-problem for Movie B is related to the definition of the minimum level of semantic difference between two terms of the list. By convention a B star is considered different from an F star. Is a pulsating B star different from a B star? Only users can decide. Has the term pulsating B star ever being used by astronomers? Yes: then the term is embarked, No, the term is discarded. But also fast pulsating B star has been used. Should we embark it? How many level of qualifiers/modifiers should we allow?


Andrea Preite Martinez                 andrea.preitemartinez-at-iasf-roma.inaf.it
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Received on 2007-09-20Z11:52:21