Title: Ontological Analysis of Taxonomic Relationships
1Ontological Analysis of Taxonomic Relationships
- Nicola Guarino, LADSEB-CNR,Italy
- Chris Welty, Vassar College, USA
Thanks to Bill Andersen, Pierdaniele Giaretta,
Dario Maguolo, Claudio Masolo, Chris Partridge,
Mike Uschold, Achille Varzi
2Approach
- Draw fundamental notions from Formal Ontology
- Establish a set of useful meta-properties, based
on behavior wrt above notions - Explore the way these meta-properties combine to
form relevant property kinds - Explore the taxonomic constraints imposed by
these property kinds.
3Dealing withOntological Relativism
- Deciding about the meta-properties carried by a
given property - Is up to YOU!
- But a common agreement must be achieved about the
formal meaning (and practical utility) of
meta-properties
4What is a taxonomic relationship?
- Is-a, a-kind-of, specialization-of, subclass
(Brachman, 1983) - horse is a mammal
- Helps deal with complexity
- What does it mean?
- ?x f(x) ? r(x)
- note correction, page 210, formula (1)
5Ontology-driven conceptual modeling
Conceptual Model
Conceptualization
Ontology
User
Methodology
Minimal Top-Level Ontology
Ontology-Driven Modeling Principles
Useful Property Kinds
Formal Ontological Properties/Relations
6Basic Philosophical Notions(taken from Formal
Ontology)
- Essence
- Identity
- Unity
- Dependence
7Essence and Rigidity
- Certain entities have essential properties.
- John must have a brain.
- John must be a person.
- Certain properties are essential to all their
instances (compare being a person with having a
brain). - These properties are rigid - if an entity is ever
an instance of a rigid property, it must always
be.
8Formal Rigidity
- f is rigid (R) ?x f(x) ? f(x)
- e.g. Person, Apple
- f is non-rigid (-R) ?x f(x) ? f(x)
- e.g. Red, Male
- f is anti-rigid (R) ?x f(x) ? f(x)
- e.g. Student, Agent
9Rigidity Constraint
- R ? R
- Why?
- ?x P(x) ? Q(x)
QR
PR
O10
10Identity and Unity
- Identity is this my dog?
- Unity is the collar part of my dog?
11Identity criteria
- Classical formulation
- f(x) ? f(y) ? (r(x,y) ? x y)
- Generalization
- f(x,t) ? f(y,t) ? (G(x,y,t,t) ? x y)
- (synchronic t t diachronic t ? t)
- In most cases, G is based on the sameness of
certain characteristic features - G(x,y, t ,t) ?z (c(x,z,t) ? c(y,z,t))
12A Stronger NotionGlobal ICs
- Local ICf(x,t) ? f(y,t) ? (G(x,y,t,t) ? x
y) - Global IC (rigid properties only)
- f(x,t) ? (f(y,t) ? G(x,y,t,t) ? x y)
13Identity Conditions along Taxonomies
- Adding ICs
- Polygon same edges, same angles
- Triangle two edges, one angle
- Equilateral triangle one angle
- Just inheriting ICs
- Person
- Student
14Identity meta-properties
- Supplying (global) identity (O)
- Having some own IC that doesnt hold for a
subsuming property - Carrying (global) identity (I)
- Having an IC (either own or inherited)
- Not carrying (global) identity (-I)
15Identity Disjointness Constraint
Besides being used for recognizing sortals, ICs
impose constraints on them, making their
ontological nature explicit
Properties with incompatible ICs are disjoint
- Examples
- sets vs. ordered sets
- amounts of matter vs. assemblies
16Unity Criteria
- An object x is a whole under w iff w is an
equivalence relation that binds together all the
parts of x, such that - P(y,x) ? (P(z,x) ? w(y,z))
- but not
- w(y,z) ? ?x(P(y,x) ? P(z,x))
- P is the part-of relation
- ? can be seen as a generalized indirect connection
17Unity Meta-Properties
- If all instances of a property f are wholes under
the same relation, f carries unity (U) - When at least one instance of f is not a whole,
or when two instances of f are wholes under
different relations, f does not carry unity (-U) - When no instance of f is a whole, f carries
anti-unity (U)
18Unity Disjointness Constraint
Properties with incompatible UCs are disjoint
19Property Dependence
- Does a property holding for x depend on something
else besides x? (property dependence) - P(x) ? ?y Q(y)
- y should not be a part of x
- Example Student/Teacher, customer/vendor
20Basic Property Kinds Table
21Sortals, categories, and other properties
- Sortals (horse, triangle, amount of matter,
person, student...) - Carry identity
- Usually correspond to nouns
- High organizational utility
- Main subclasses types and roles
- Categories (universal, particular, event,
substance...) - No identity
- Useful generalizations for sortals
- Characterized by a set of (only necessary) formal
properties - Good organizational utility
- Other non-sortals (red, big, decomposable,
eatable, dependent, singular...) - No identity
- Correspond to adjectives
- Span across different sortals
- Limited organizational utility (but high semantic
value)
22A formal ontology of properties
Category R
Non-sortal -I
Attribution -R-D
Role RD
Formal Role
Property
Material role
Anti-rigid R
Non-rigid -R
Phased sortal -D L
Mixin -D
SortalI
Type O
Rigid R
Quasi-type -O
23The Backbone Taxonomy
- Assumption no entity without identity
- Since identity is supplied by types, every entity
must instantiate a type - The taxonomy of types spans the whole domain
- Together with categories, types form the backbone
taxonomy, which represents the invariant
structure of a domain (rigid properties spanning
the whole domain)
24Taxonomic Constraints
- R ? R
- -I ? I
- -U ? U
- U ? U
- -D ? D
- Incompatible ICs are disjoint
- Incompatible UCs are disjoint
- Categories subsume everything
- Roles cant subsume types
25(No Transcript)
26An extended example
27Dealing withOntological Relativism
- Deciding about the meta-properties carried by a
given property - Is up to YOU!
- But a common agreement must be achieved about the
formal meaning (and practical utility) of
meta-properties
28Property AnalysisEntity, Location
- Entity
- Everything is an entity
- -I-U-DR
- Category
- Location
- A generalized region of space.
- O by its parts (mereologically extensional).
- U no way to isolate a location
- -DR
- Type
29Property AnalysisAmount of Matter, Red
- Amount of Matter
- unstructured /scattered stuff as lumps of clay
or some bricks - O mereologically extensional
- U intrinsically no unity
- -DR
- Type
- Red
- Really Red-thing, the set of all red-colored
entities - -I-U-D-R
- Formal Attribution
30Property AnalysisAgent, Group
- Agent
- An entity playing a part in some event
- -I-U no universal IC/UC
- D on the event/action participating in
- R no instance is necessarily an agent
- Formal role
- Group
- An unstructured collection of wholes
- O same-members
- U unstructured, no unity.
- -DR
- Type
31Property AnalysisPhysical Object, Living Being
- Physical Object
- Isolated material objects.
- O same spatial location (only synchronic, no
common diachronic IC). - U Topological
- -DR
- Type
- Living Being
- O same-DNA (only nec.)
- U biological unity
- -DR
- Type
32Property AnalysisFood, Animal
- Food
- I-OU amt. of matter
- D something that eats it.
- R being food is not necessary...
- Material Role
- Animal
- O same-brain
- U biological unity
- -DR
- Type
33Property AnalysisLegal Agent, Group of People
- Legal Agent
- A legally recognized entity
- L All legal systems have a defined IC,
has-same-legal-ID - -U no universal unity
- D on the legal body that recognizes it
- R not necessary
- Material Role
- Group of People
- See Group
- I-OU-DR
- Quasi-type
34Property AnalysisSocial Entity, Organization
- Social Entity
- A group of people together for social reasons
- -I no universal IC
- U social-connection
- -DR
- category
- Organization
- A group of people together, with roles that
define some structure - O same-mission and way of operating
- U functional
- -DR
- Type
35Property AnalysisFruit
- Fruit
- An individual fruit, such as an orange or bannana
- O same-plant, same-shape, etc. (only nec.)
- U topological
- -DR
- Type
36Property AnalysisApple, Red Apple
- Apple
- O shape, color, skin pattern (only nec)
- U topological
- -DR
- Type
- Red-Apple
- I-O from Apple
- U from Apple
- -D
- R no red apple is necessarily red
- type-attribution mixin
37Property AnalysisVertebrate, Person
- Vertebrate
- Really vertebrate-animal
- A biological classification that adds new
membership criteria (has-backbone) - I-O from animal
- U from animal
- -DR
- quasi-type
- Person
- O same-fingerprint
- U from animal
- -DR
- Type
38Property AnalysisButterfly, Caterpillar
- Butterfly
- L same-wing-pattern
- U biological
- -D
- R the same entity can be something else (a
caterpillar) - Phased sortal
- Caterpillar
- L spots, legs, color
- U biological
- -D
- R caterpillars become butterflies and change
their IC - Phased sortal
39Property AnalysisCountry
- Country
- A place recognized by convention as autonomous
- L government, sub-regions
- U countries are countable (heuristic)
- -D
- R some countries do not exist as countries any
more (e.g. Prussia) but are still places - Phased sortal
40Entity
assign meta-properties
Social entity
Organization
41Entity-I-U-DR
Remove non-rigid properties
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Agent -I-UDR
Red -I-U-D-R
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Food I-OUDR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Legal agent L-UDR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Red apple I-OU-DR
Country LU-DR
Person OU-DR
42Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- U cant subsume U
- Living being can change parts and remain the
same, but amounts of matter can not (incompatible
ICs) - Living being is constituted of matter
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
43Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- U cant subsume U
- Living being can change parts and remain the
same, but amounts of matter can not (incompatible
ICs) - Living being is constituted of matter
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
44Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- U cant subsume U
- Physical objects can change parts and remain the
same, but amounts of matter can not (incompatible
ICs) - Physical object is constituted of matter
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
45Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- U cant subsume U
- Physical objects can change parts and remain the
same, but amounts of matter can not (incompatible
ICs) - Physical object is constituted of matter
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
46Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- Meta-properties fine
- Identity-check fails when an entity stops being
an animal, it does not stop being a physical
object (when an animal dies, its body remains) - Constitution again
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
47Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- Meta-properties fine
- Identity-check fails when an entity stops being
an animal, it does not stop being a physical
object (when an animal dies, its body remains) - Constitution again
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
48Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- U cant subsume U
- A group, and group of people, cant change parts
- it becomes a different group - A social entity can change parts - its more than
just a group (incompatible IC) - Constitution again
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
49Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze taxonomic links
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- U cant subsume U
- A group, and group of people, cant change parts
- it becomes a different group - A social entity can change parts - its more than
just a group (incompatible IC) - Constitution again
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
50Entity-I-U-DR
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
51Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Phased Sortals
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
- For phased sortals what do they phase into?
- Country is anti-rigid because it is representing
multiple senses of country a geographical region
and a political entity. - Split the two senses into two concepts, both
rigid, both types.
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
52Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Phased Sortals
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
- There is a relationship between the two, but not
subsumption.
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Country LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
53Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Phased Sortals
- Caterpillar phases into butterfly - a true phased
sortal - There must be some property from which a single
entity can uniquely claim identity across phases
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
- Define a rigid property which subsumes only the
phases of the same entity.
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
54Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Phased Sortals
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
55Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Roles
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
- R cant subsume R
- Really want a type restriction all agents are
animals or social entities. - Subsumption is not disjunction!
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
56Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Roles
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
- R cant subsume R
- Really want a type restriction all agents are
animals or social entities. - Subsumption is not disjunction!
Agent -I-UDR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
57Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Roles
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
- R cant subsume R
- Another disjunction all legal agents are
countries, persons, or organizations
Agent -I-UDR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
58Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Roles
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
- R cant subsume R
- Another disjunction all legal agents are
countries, persons, or organizations
Agent -I-UDR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Legal agent L-UDR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
59Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Roles
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Agent -I-UDR
- R cant subsume R
- Apple is not necessarily food. A poison-apple,
e.g., is still an apple. - U cant subsume U
- Caterpillars are wholes, food is stuff.
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Legal agent L-UDR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
60Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Roles
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Agent -I-UDR
- R cant subsume R
- Apple is not necessarily food. A poison-apple,
e.g., is still an apple. - U cant subsume U
- Caterpillars are wholes, food is stuff.
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Legal agent L-UDR
Food I-OUDR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
61Entity-I-U-DR
Analyze Attributions
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Agent -I-UDR
- No violations
- Attributions are discouraged, can be confusing.
- Often better to use attribute values (i.e. Apple
Color red)
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Legal agent L-UDR
Food I-OUDR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
62Entity-I-U-DR
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Agent -I-UDR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Legal agent L-UDR
Food I-OUDR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
63Entity-I-U-DR
The backbone taxonomy
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
64Entity-I-U-DR
Amount of matter OU-DR
Location O-U-DR
Group OU-DR
Agent -I-UDR
Physical object OU-DR
Living being OU-DR
Food I-OUDR
Legal agent L-UDR
Red -I-U-D-R
Social entity -IU-DR
Fruit OU-DR
Animal OU-DR
Group of people I-OU-DR
Apple OU-DR
Lepidopteran OU-DR
Vertebrate I-OU-DR
Geographical Region O-U-DR
Country OU-DR
Caterpillar LU-DR
Butterfly LU-DR
Organization OU-DR
Person OU-DR
Red apple I-OU-DR
65FOIS 2001Formal Ontology in Information Systems
Announcing...