a socio-cultural ontology for urban development

26
A socio-cultural ontology for urban development Stefan Trausan-Matu Politehnica" University of Bucharest and Romanian Academy Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence Bucharest, Romania [email protected] http://www.racai.ro/~trausan

Upload: stefan-trausan-matu

Post on 10-May-2015

1.308 views

Category:

Technology


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

Stefan Trausan-Matu“Politehnica" University of Bucharest

andRomanian Academy Research Institute for

Artificial IntelligenceBucharest, Romania

[email protected] http://www.racai.ro/~trausan

Page 2: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 2

Methods for ontology development

Ad-hocFormal concept analysisPsycholinguistics (WordNet)Starting from a thesaurus, a Data Base, a taxonomy or other structured repositoriesOntologies alignmentKnowledge extraction from texts (text mining) Starting from philosophical categories (e.g. Sowa)

Page 3: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 3

Philosophical paradigms

Cognitive science: “knowledge is in the mind of individual persons” (Cyc, WordNet, FrameNet, Mikrokosmos, Sowa …)Socio-cultural: “knowledge is social, is in communities where people enter in dailogs” (Vygotsky, Engeström, Stahl …)

Page 4: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 4

Why a socio-cultural paradigm?

Cognitive science and artificial intelligence problemsConsidering socio-cultural issues in urbanismSupporting dialogism Group knowledge construction Conflict resolution Reaching common meaning through

dialog

Page 5: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 5

Methodology

Combination of Pierce’s categories

Individuals Relations Triples

Engeström’s theory of activity Hewit’s use of triangles in

Engeström’s diagram

Page 6: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 6

Basic Categories in Sowa’s Ontology(including Pierce’s categories)

Page 7: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 7

Vygotsky’s mediating triangle

Page 8: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 8

The activity diagram of Engeström

Page 9: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 9

1. Individuals

SubjectsObjectsCommunitiesGeneral artifactsSocial rulesDivision of labor

Page 10: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 10

Subjects

may be classified in several ways, considering different aspects: earnings, social status, ethnicity, age, hobbies, religion, etc.these aspects may be either the basis of a taxonomy of concepts or of attributes. For example, a person that has a habit of walking in a park may either be a new concept, which inherits from the subject concept, or an instance of the subject having “walking in a park” as the habit attribute.

Page 11: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 11

Objects

buildings, roads, parks, cars, etc. each of these concepts may be the root of an entire ontology. For example, buildings may be classified in living houses, offices buildings, theaters, cinemas, sport halls, hospitals, factories, shops, etc.

Page 12: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 12

Communities

may be classified in the socio-cultural ontology according to several criteria, some of them derived from subjects’ attributes like religion or ethnic group.

Page 13: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 13

General artifactsmay be physical (tools, objects with a given use, that means that a sub-concept of the object category may be meanwhile a sub-concept of the artifact category),symbolic (texts, prices, taxes)mental (e.g. imagery, visual patterns, architectural styles).

Page 14: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 14

Social rules

may be legislation, traffic rules, unwritten behavior laws or esthetics.Rules may also become artifacts (sub-concepts of the rule category may be also sub-concepts of the artifact category), used by objects in communities.

Page 15: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 15

Division of labor

is a basis for the taxonomy of services that assure the functioning and the quality of life of communities (providers of electricity, water and gas, teaching, police, fire department, administration, etc.)

Page 16: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 16

2. Relationssubject – object (owned buildings and cars)subject – rulessubject – communitycommunity – rulescommunity – object (e.g. buildings, cars, parks)community – divisions of labor (e.g. roles)community – artifacts (e.g. beliefs, documents like

acts)object – artifact (property acts, blueprints)object – subject (owner)object – rule (of use)

Page 17: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 17

3. Triples

May be triangles in the activity diagramOther mediating artifacts

Page 18: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 18

Image of rules in communities

Page 19: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 19

Artifacts of subjects in communities

Page 20: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 20

Roles of individuals in a community

Page 21: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 21

Rules for objects’ use in a community

Page 22: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 22

Rules (laws) that apply to an individual in relation to an object

Page 23: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 23

The “mountain_house” “artifact_community_rule” triple and some related concepts.

Page 24: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 24

The OWL description of the mountain_house concepts.

<owl:Class rdf:ID="mountain_house"> <rdfs:subClassOf rdf:resource="#artifact_community_rule"/> <rdfs:subClassOf> <owl:Restriction> <owl:hasValue rdf:resource="#build_with_wood"/> <owl:onProperty> <owl:ObjectProperty rdf:ID="t_rule"/> </owl:onProperty> </owl:Restriction> </rdfs:subClassOf> <rdfs:subClassOf> <owl:Restriction> <owl:onProperty> <owl:ObjectProperty rdf:ID="t_artifact"/> </owl:onProperty> <owl:hasValue rdf:resource="#mountain_house_image"/> </owl:Restriction> </rdfs:subClassOf> </owl:Class>

Page 25: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 25

The OWL description of the t_community property.

<owl:ObjectProperty rdf:ID="t_community">

<rdfs:domain>

<owl:Class>

<owl:unionOf rdf:parseType="Collection">

<rdf:Description

rdf:about=

"http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#Thing"/>

<owl:Class rdf:about="#mountain_house"/>

</owl:unionOf>

</owl:Class>

</rdfs:domain>

</owl:ObjectProperty>

Page 26: A socio-cultural ontology for urban development

6 November 2006 Towntology, Geneva 26

Further work

Develop the socio-cultural ontologyDevelop software for conflict management in dialogs, based on ontologiesOntology extraction from dialogsOntology-based applications for urbanization in Romania