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Semantic Interoperability Community of Practice SICoP

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Title: Semantic Interoperability Community of Practice SICoP


1
Semantic Interoperability Community of Practice
(SICoP)
  • Brand Niemann
  • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
    niemann.brand_at_epa.gov
  • SICoP, Chair

2
Preface
  • Dr. Niemann has been with the U.S. EPA for 25
    years and currently works in the Office of the
    Chief Information Officer and Assistant
    Administrator for Environmental Information as an
    Enterprise Architect and Semantic Web Services
    Specialist.
  • He Chairs the Federal CIO Councils Semantic
    Interoperability Community of Practice (SICoP).
  • He serves as a member of the XML Conference
    Planning Committee, the E-Gov Institute Program
    Planning Committee, the Architecture
    Infrastructure Committee, and the Knowledge
    Management Working Group of the Best Practices
    Committee.

3
Preface
  • Thank you for the invitation to participate and I
    think it is significant that you start your
    conference on a day set aside to celebrate
    wonderful relationships
  • I opened a sweet Valentines Day card from my
    sweetheart this morning that I found in my
    suitcase last night!
  • I opened your conference brochure and saw the
    names of 4 colleagues on tomorrows agenda that I
    have been privileged to develop wonderful
    personal and professional relationships with
    during the past five years.

4
Preface
  • Continued
  • I read the words agility and looking inward
    looking outward in your conference theme and
    recalled they are about good relationships
  • Agile Methods lightweight software development
    methodologies that emphasize close collaboration
    between the programmer team and business experts
    face-to-face communication (as more efficient
    than written documentation) frequent delivery of
    new deployable business value tight,
    self-organizing teams and ways to craft code and
    the team such that the inevitable requirements
    churn is not a crisis.
  • See the Agile Alliance Web site at
    http//www.agilalliance.org.home

5
Preface
  • Continued
  • I read the words agility and looking inward
    looking outward in your conference theme and
    recalled they are about good relationships
    (continued)
  • Endocepts from the Greek endo meaning inside
    the Ahas insights that suggest ways out of
    a problem situation so building good
    relationships between inspirations and realities.
  • From stories that spark peoples imagination to
    formal Solution Envisioning sessions.
  • See Capability Cases A Solution Envisioning
    Approach, Polikoff, Coyne, and Hodgson, 2005,
    Addison Wesley.
  • Ralph Hodgson gives two presentation tommorrow!

6
Preface
  • Continued
  • I read about your new Semantic Technology
    Integrated Program Environment (IPE) and Semantic
    Technology Briefings and Workshops and they are
    about building good relationships with each other
    around a new technology!
  • So this all fits together nicely with what I want
    to talk to you about
  • SICoP, a community of practice to improve the
    public-private relationships to deliver improved
    E-Government Services to the public.

7
Preface
  • Continued
  • So this all fits together nicely with what I want
    to talk to you about (continued)
  • Yes, you serve the government, but we serve the
    citizen, so by inference (a term from semantic
    technologies), you help us serve the citizens.
  • And I am pleased to say that Lockheed Martin is
    an excellent participant in SICoP as you will see
    later in this presentation.
  • We had 5 Lockheed Martin employees registered for
    our Fourth Semantic Interoperability for
    E-Government Conference last week.

8
Overview
  • The Semantic Interoperability Community of
    Practice (SICoP) has made considerable progress
    towards implementations of semantic technologies
    and web standards in the U.S. government with a
    series of white papers, conferences, and pilot
    projects.
  • Part I. SICoP and Data Reference Model 2.0
    Implementation Making it Real.
  • Part II. Highlights of the 4th Semantic
    Interoperability for E-Government Conference,
    February 9-10, 2006.
  • Part III. Related Presentation by Mills Davis,
    Semantic Wave 2006 Executive Guide to the
    Business Value of Semantic Technologies

9
Some Kudos
  • You should be proud of the way that DRM 2.0
    turned out and how it has been accepted by the
    data community. The open, collaborative
    development process sets it apart, and gives us a
    high standard for our other efforts across
    government.
  • Richard Burk, Chief Architect, OMB, 12/22/2005.
  • Note The SICoP White Paper Module 1, Figure 6
    (Data Structure Continuum, From Pollock and
    Hodgson, 2004) suggested the three basic types of
    data used in the DRM 2.0 !

10
Some Kudos
11
Some Press
  • Government Computer News GCN.com
  • January 11, 2006 1000 AM
  • Data Reference Model 2.0 and the role of metadata
  • GCN Senior Writer Joab Jackson moderated an
    online forum Jan. 11 with Brand Niemann, chairman
    of the Federal CIO Council Semantic
    Interoperability Community of Practice.
  • In 2006, one of the big issues for government
    content managers will be how to share information
    more easily. Niemann helped draft the second
    version of the Data Reference Model, the Office
    of Management and Budgets own framework for
    interagency sharing of information. Niemann also
    discussed advanced semantic technologies, the
    usefulness of Wikis and metadata and the upcoming
    Semantic Interoperability for E-Government
    Conference.
  • See Transcript at http//appserv.gcn.com/forum/qna
    _forum/37914-2.html

12
IntroductionUse the DRM 2.0 Abstract
ModelDescription, Context, Sharing
  • Describe Yourself
  • Scientist Atmospheric and Computer Science.
  • EPA Data Standards (ISO/IEC 11179), SICoP
    (Semantic Standards and Technologies), and DRM
    (Composite Applications, etc.) Pilots.
  • Describe Your Context
  • Scientific Method Do Experiments (Pilots) to
    Test Architectural (Enterprise, Knowledge, Data)
    Concepts.
  • A total of 10 public forums, meetings, and
    workshops and 29 pilot presentations on the DRM
    in the past five months!
  • Describe What You Want to Share
  • Five Steps to Interoperability (in the domain of
    scientific ontology) (Barry Smith).
  • Find ways to use reality to take care of
    interoperability (when scientists disagree they
    let reality tell them how to resolve their
    disagreement they look at instances). (Concept,
    instance, and the relationship between them
    otherwise it is just in our minds.)

13
Information Model
  • Part I. Ontology and Flow
  • 1. What is Semantic Interoperability?
  • 2. What is a Community of Practice?
  • 3. What is DRM 2.0?
  • 4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
  • 5. Where is SICoP DRM 2.0 Implementation Going?
  • 6. Can semantics improve the usefulness of the
    ISO/IEC 11179 standard? (Pilot Demonstration)

14
Information Model
Two Connected Layers Knowledge Map and the
Information Resources
SICoP and DRM Implementation Through Iteration
and Testing Making It Real, Federal Metadata
Management Consortium, Dec. 13,
2005. http//web-services.gov/scopefmmc12132005.pp
t
Also used in Building Semantic Webs for
e-government with Wiki technology.
http//colab.cim3.net/file/work/SICoP/2006-02-09/E
Gov20Wiki.pdf
15
Information Model
  • Introduce a concept in the form of a question.
  • Answer that question with a definition and an
    instance that illustrates the relationship we
    mean between the concept and the instance.
  • Provide a flow of concepts and instances that
    supports logic and reasoning.
  • This illustrates the Knowledge Reference Model we
    are working towards!

16
Part I1. What is Semantic Interoperability?
  • Formal Semantics
  • Semantic is primarily concerned with sameness. It
    determines that two entities are the same in
    spite of appearing to be different.
  • Number semantics 5.1, 5.10, and 05.1 are all the
    same number.
  • DNA sequence semantics cctggacct is the same as
    CCTGGACCT.
  • XML document semantics is defined by infosets.

Introduction to the Semantic Web for
Bioinformatics, Ken Baclawski, December 6, 2005,
K. Baclawski T. Niu, Ontologies for
Bioinformatics, MIT Press, October, 2005
17
Part I1. What is Semantic Interoperability?
  • Five Steps to Interoperability (in the domain of
    scientific ontology)
  • (1) Find ways to use reality to take care of
    interoperability (when scientists disagree they
    let reality tell them how to resolve their
    disagreement they look at instances).
  • (2) Recognize that an ontology consists of names
    for types and of representations of relations
    between types defined in terms of underlying
    relations between instances.
  • (3) Recognize correspondingly that there are
    three kinds of relations ltclass, classgt, ltclass,
    instancegt, ltinstance, instancegt
  • (4) Use a coherent upper level taxonomy
    distinguishing continuants (cells, molecules,
    organisms ...), occurrents (events, processes),
    dependent entities (qualities, functions ...),
    and independent entities (their bearers).
  • (5) Coordinate, coordinate, coordinate!

Barry Smith, Workshop on Bio-ontologies,
October 28, 2005, University of Buffalo.
18
Part I1. What is Semantic Interoperability?
Mapping ebXML to/from UDDI
UDDI and ebXML from One Registry, Tony Graham,
XML 2005 Conference, November 14-18, Atlanta, GA.
19
Part I2. What is a Community of Practice?
  • The concept of a Community of Practice (often
    abbreviated as CoP) refers to the process of
    social learning that occurs when people who have
    a common interest in some subject or problem
    collaborate over an extended period to share
    ideas, find solutions, and build innovations.
  • Source http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_of_
    practice
  • More recently Communities of Practice have become
    associated with knowledge management.

20
Part I2. What is a Community of Practice?
  • Table of Contents
  • Charter
  • Calendar
  • Future
  • Past
  • SICoP Working Groups and Projects
  • SICoP Conferences and Public Meetings
  • SICoP White Papers and Presentations
  • SICoP Support for the Data Reference Model
  • Discussion Forum Archives / File Workspace
    Resources
  • SICoP Conference Calls

See http//colab.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?SICoP
21
Part I2. What is a Community of Practice?
Source http//colab.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?Wiki
HomePage
22
Part ILogic and Reasoning
  • So SICoP is primarily concerned with sameness
    using scientific ontology focused on
    instances by coordination across community
    over an extended period to find solutions to
    interoperability.
  • Also see the SICoP Charter
  • The Semantic Interoperability Community of
    Practice (SICoP) is established by a group of
    individuals for the purpose of achieving
    "semantic interoperability" and "semantic data
    integration" in the government sector.
  • The SICoP seeks to enable Semantic
    Interoperability, specifically the
    "operationalizing" of these technologies and
    approaches, through online conversation,
    meetings, tutorials, conferences, pilot projects,
    and other activities aimed at developing and
    disseminating best practices.

23
Part I3. What is DRM 2.0?
  • A New FEA Reference Model with
  • (1) Reference Model
  • Abstract Model.
  • (2) Management Strategy
  • FEA Enterprise Architecture Assessment Framework
    2.0.
  • (3) Implementation Guidance
  • Pilots During 2005 and Continuing in 2006. Five
    Vendor Implementations So Far!
  • (4) OMB Draft E-Gov Act 2002 Section 207d /DRM
    Guidance
  • See Footnote 14.

Like a four-legged stool with rungs to create a
stable platform going forward. Need all four legs
and all four rungs connecting them to remain
stable.
24
Part I3. What is DRM 2.0?
  • Data Three Types structured (20), and
    unstructured and semi-structured (80).
  • Originally it was the Data and Information
    Reference Model.
  • Metadata Three Roles discovery, integration,
    and reasoning.
  • Recombine data and metadata for sharing and reuse
    and address Section 207d requirements (see slide
    21).
  • Model Three Functions description, context,
    and sharing.
  • DRM XML Schema and DRM Abstract Model (see next
    slide).
  • Reporting Three Documents reference,
    management strategy, and implementation guide.
  • Integrated in the DRM Education Pilot with Pilot
    Metrics and CoP/CoI Templates (see slide 22).
  • Metamodel Three Implementation Levels
    organizational, technical, and semantic
    interoperability or agency, CoI, and cross-CoI.
  • European Interoperability Framework, Andreas
    Tolk, Enterprise Architecture Assessment 2.0, DoD
    Net-Centric Strategy, etc.

25
Part I3. What is DRM 2.0?
Portion of the Abstract Model where data elements
are classified, specified, defined, named, and
registered.
26
Part I3. What is DRM 2.0?
Mapping DRM Abstract Model to OMB Section 207d /
DRM Guidance
27
Part I3. What is DRM 2.0?
Use DRM Version 2.0 itself as a pilot project for
education and FEA information sharing!
See http//web-services.gov and Dynamic Knowledge
Repositories
28
Part I3. What is DRM 2.0?
The Data Reference Model 2.0 Education Pilot
Implements This Schematic Diagram!
Source Expanding E-Government, Improved Service
Delivery for the American People Using
Information Technology, December 2005, pages
2-3. http//www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budintegration/
expanding_egov_2005.pdf
29
Part I4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
  • What is it? Taxonomies and Ontologies for
    describing information relationships and
    associations in a way that can be accessed and
    searched.
  • What am I expected to do? Use the DRM Abstract
    Model to guide both your agency data architecture
    and your interagency data sharing activities.
  • What are some best practices for doing it? See
    Ontology and Taxonomy Coordinating Work Group,
    etc.
  • How do I work both locally in my Agency and more
    globally with other agencies on this? Participate
    in the Collaborative Workshops, the DRM ITIT
    Team, etc.

See next slide for explanation.
30
Part I4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
  • Metamodel by Andreas Tolk (2005)
  • There are four rectangular boxes on top of one
    another (labeled from bottom to top data,
    metadata, model, and metamodel, respectively) and
    each box contains 2-4 circular colored dots, and
    these colored dots are connected with lines,
    meant to show that there are relationships, or
    need to be relationships, between say data and
    metadata, between metadata and models, and
    between models and metamodels. The purpose is to
    show that we need to describe information model
    relationships and associations in a way that can
    be accessed and searched.

Note This is also provided for Section 508
Compliance of the graphics.
31
Part I4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
See next slide for explanation.
Source Mills Davis, Smart Search Continuum in
DRM Implementation - Preliminary Strategy,
October 11, 2005.
32
Part I4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
  • The role of semantic metadata in increasing
    search capability
  • In this XY graph, the X axis is labeled
    "Increasing Search Capability" (with sub-labels
    of Recovery, Discovery, Intelligence, Question
    Answering, and Reasoning) and the Y-Axis is
    labeled "Increasing Metadata" (with sub-labels
    from Weak Semantics to Strong Semantics). A
    straight line from the origin to the upper right
    has labels of Syntactic Interoperability
    (sub-label "Many Federal applications do not
    enable data sharing"), Structural
    Interoperability (DRM 2.0 sets the bar here), and
    Semantic Interoperability (Some Intelligence,
    Defense, Security, Health, Science Business
    applications share information at these levels)
    from bottom to top. The point of this XY graph is
    that Increasing Metadata (from glossaries to
    ontologies) is highly correlated with Increasing
    Search Capability (from discovery to reasoning).

Note This is also provided for Section 508
Compliance of the graphics.
33
Part I4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
  • Five Key Activities Over the Next Year
  • (1) Education and Training in DRM Version 2.0 and
    use in FEA DRM-based Information Sharing Pilots
    (started June 13, 2005).
  • (2) Testing of XML Schemas and OWL Ontologies by
    NIST and the National Center for Ontological
    Research, respectively, among others (began
    October 27, 2005).
  • (3) Inventory/Repository of Semantic
    Interoperability Assets and Development of a
    Common Semantic Model (COSMO) by the new Ontology
    and Taxonomy Coordinating Work Group (ONTACWG)
    (started October 5, 2005).
  • (4) Continued early implementation of DRM 2.0
    concepts and artifacts by industry in open
    collaboration with open standards pilot projects
    and workshops (started July 19, 2005).
  • (5) Fostering champions of DRM Best Practices to
    improve (1) agency data architectures within
    agencies and (2) cross-agency data sharing across
    agencies in funded projects (started June 13,
    2005).

34
Part I4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
  • Pilot Metrics
  • A specific instance for the Semantic DNS - UDEF
    Disaster Response Pilot (presented on November
    10th, December 6th and today), based on an
    initial assessment subject to feedback and
    review, is that it covers 13 of the 15 boxes in
    the five by three matrix (recall slide 5 Data,
    Model, Documents, Implementation, and Status).
    The two missing boxes are that it does not
    currently treat unstructured or semi-structured
    data. This has been addressed.
  • This template will be completed for all pilot
    projects and provides metrics to help decide what
    should be done with the pilots, namely, adopt
    them (high score), improve them (moderate score),
    or not adopt them (low score).
  • CoP/CoI Templates (see next slide)
  • Helps CoPs/CoIs both differentiate themselves
    from one another as to their unique interests as
    well as help discover where collaboration and
    synergy is possible.

35
Part I4. What is DRM 2.0 Implementation Guidance?
  • Community Profile for XXX
  • By / Date
  • Last Updated
  • Community (name)
  • Date Established
  • Key Stakeholders
  • Constituency
  • Domain
  • Mission / Charter
  • With respect to Ontology work (esp. eGov-related
    work), the community's
  • Medium Term Goal
  • Short Term Goal
  • Deliverables within the next 6 months
  • Key Differentiation (with the other communities
    presenting today)
  • What we can bring to the table to foster
    collaboration with other communities here today
  • Additional Remarks
  • Contact
  • See http//ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?Confer
    enceCall_2005_11_10/Prep

36
Part I5. Where is SICoP DRM 2.0 Implementation
Going?
  • The Evolution of Metadata
  • In the beginning there was data, and hopefully
    its documentation but it was not accessible so
    we resorted to
  • Metadata for Discovery but we still wanted to
    see the actual data now both are on the Web.
  • Metadata for Integration but that is really
    hard.
  • I spent two years doing it for the Interagency
    Chesapeake Bay Program databases with help from
    graduate classes in exploratory data analysis and
    statistical data visualization and produced a
    comprehensive Data Story.
  • And now the new paradigm is Executable Metadata
    the data (XML), metadata (RDF), models (RDF/S)
    and metamodels (OWL) are all integrated to
    support knowledge computing, statistical
    computing, and stochastic inference under
    conditions of uncertainty referred to as the
    Bayesian Web
  • See "Ontologies for Bioinformatics, Ken
    Baclawski and Tianhua Niu, MIT Press, October
    2005 http//ontobio.org/
  • And see the National Center for Ontological
    Research (NCOR) http//ncor.us

37
Part I5. Where is SICoP DRM 2.0 Implementation
Going?
Source Mills Davis, http//web-services.gov/NetCe
ntricSemantics051110.pdf
38
Part I5. Where is SICoP DRM 2.0 Implementation
Going?
Super Pilot Address as Many Boxes as Possible!
Yes
?
?
CoP Community of Practice LoB Line of
Business FHA/DAWG Federal Health Architecture
Data Architecture Work Group See FHA Data
Architecture Working Group SICoP DRM 2.0 Pilot,
December 28, 2005. http//web-services.gov/scopefh
adawg.ppt
39
Part I6. Can Semantics improve the usefulness of
the ISO/IEC 11179 standard?
  • The Semantic DNS - UDEF Disaster Response Pilot
    comes from asking the question can semantics
    improve the usefulness of the ISO/IEC 11179
    standard?
  • And the experiment (pilot) shows that it does!
  • Ron Schuldt at the Federal Metadata Management
    Consortium Meeting, December 13, 2005
  • Followups with National Cancer Institute and
    IPV6!
  • Applications to other emerging technologies like
    RFID!

Lockheed Martin and Chair, The Open Group UDEF
Forum
40
Part I6. Can Semantics improve the usefulness of
the ISO/IEC 11179 standard?
  • The semantics portion of the approach is based on
    an evolving global standard known as the
    Universal Data Element Framework (UDEF). The UDEF
    is a method for categorizing data element
    concepts (as defined by ISO/IEC 11179) that exist
    across multiple applications. It assigns each
    data element concept an alphanumeric tag plus a
    semantically rich name that in most cases can
    stand-alone without requiring a separate
    definition.
  • For example, Purchase Order Number found in an
    invoice from industry to the government is a
    commonly encountered data element concept. This
    concept has a UDEF tag d.t.2_13.35.8 and
    associated UDEF name Purchase.Order.DOCUMENT_Gover
    nment.Assigned.IDENTIFIER.

41
Part I6. Can Semantics improve the usefulness of
the ISO/IEC 11179 standard?
  • The UDEF name and associated ID pair is similar
    in several ways to the Domain Name System (DNS)
    used to manage computer-sensible IP addresses in
    123.123.123.123 format and to associate them with
    user-friendly formats such as www.company.com If
    adopted on a global scale, the UDEF could become
    a Semantic DNS or Semantic Bridge connecting the
    semantics of data element concepts across
    disparate applications across the globe.
  • The Semantic DNS - UDEF Disaster Response Pilot
    was submitted October 14, 2005, to the Federal
    Semantic Interoperability Community of Practice
    as a proposed solution approach and was was
    demonstrated live at The Open Group Semantic
    Interoperability Conference in Houston on October
    20, 2005.

42
Ron Schuldt, Lockheed Martin Corporation and
Chair, The Open Group UDEF Forum
By SICoP Chair, Brand Niemann, U.S. EPA
Produced in Collaboration With
43
Part II. Recent Conference
  • Fourth Semantic Interoperability for E-Government
    Conference, February 9-10, 2006, MITRE, McLean,
    Virginia
  • February 9th
  • Opening Keynote and Demonstration
  • The Semantic Web for Bioinformatics Professor
    Ken Baclawski
  • Ontology-based Searching for Health Information
    (e.g. Is my child safe from environmental
    toxins?) Michael Belanger
  • Featured Presentation and Panel
  • The Business Value for Semantic Technologies
    Mills Davis
  • Senior Officials and Managers - CIO Council and
    Committees, Agency, IAC, etc.
  • Vendor/Poster Networking 30
  • Presentations and Work Group and Partner Reports
    32 and 4 and 3, respectively
  • Closing Keynote and Dialogue Professor Jim
    Hendler

44
Part II. Recent Conference
  • Fourth Semantic Interoperability for E-Government
    Conference, February 9-10, 2006, MITRE, McLean,
    Virginia (continued)
  • February 10th
  • Work Group Sessions
  • Data Reference Model Implementation, Health
    Information Technology Ontology, FEA Reference
    Model Ontology, and Ontology and Taxonomy
    Coordination.
  • Breakout Session Presentations 12
  • Tutorials (BBN, TopQuadrant/Oracle, Baclawski)
  • Some Highlights
  • Registered Attendees 250 (remote audience
    video)
  • Special Recognitions See next slide

45
Part II. Recent Conference
  • Outstanding Contributions as a Member of the
    Planning Committee Rick Tucker, MITRE.
  • Best Co-Papers Elisa Kendall, Sandpiper, Sam
    Chance, US Navy, and Michael Seebold, Concurrent
    Technologies Corporation.
  • Best Semantic Harmonization Tool Application,
    Chuck Mosher, MetaMatrix Corporation.
  • Best Exhibit Siderean.
  • Best Breakout Session Presentations Gregory
    Fairnak, Consultant to Northrop Grumman and Ray
    Piasecki, BAE Systems.

46
Part III. Related Presentation
  • Mills Davis, Semantic Wave 2006 Executive Guide
    to the Business Value of Semantic Technologies
  • Mills is Project10Xs managing director for
    industry research and strategic programs. Mills
    consults with technology manufacturers, global
    2000 corporations, and government agencies on
    next-wave semantic technologies and solutions.
  • Mills serves as lead for the Federal CIO
    councils Semantic Interoperability Community of
    Practice (SICoP) research into the business value
    of semantic technologies. Also, he a founding
    member of the AIIM interoperable enterprise
    content management (iECM) working group, and a
    founding member of the National Center for
    Ontology Research (NCOR).
  • A noted researcher and industry analyst, Mills
    has authored more than 100 reports, whitepapers,
    articles, and industry studies.
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