Título : Supporting the analysis of ontology evolution processes through the combination of static and dynamic scaling functions in OQuaRE |
Autor : Duque-Ramos, Astrid Quesada-Martínez, Manuel Iniesta-Moreno, Miguela Fernández-Breis, Jesualdo Tomás Stevens, Robert |
Editor : Springer |
Departamento: Departamentos de la UMH::Estadística, Matemáticas e Informática |
Fecha de publicación: 2016-10 |
URI : https://hdl.handle.net/11000/38783 |
Resumen :
Background: The biomedical community has now developed a significant number of ontologies. The curation of
biomedical ontologies is a complex task and biomedical ontologies evolve rapidly, so new versions are regularly and
frequently published in ontology repositories. This has the implication of there being a high number of ontology
versions over a short time span. Given this level of activity, ontology designers need to be supported in the effective
management of the evolution of biomedical ontologies as the different changes may affect the engineering and
quality of the ontology. This is why there is a need for methods that contribute to the analysis of the effects of
changes and evolution of ontologies.
Results: In this paper we approach this issue from the ontology quality perspective. In previous work we have
developed an ontology evaluation framework based on quantitative metrics, called OQuaRE. Here, OQuaRE is used as
a core component in a method that enables the analysis of the different versions of biomedical ontologies using the
quality dimensions included in OQuaRE. Moreover, we describe and use two scales for evaluating the changes
between the versions of a given ontology. The first one is the static scale used in OQuaRE and the second one is a
new, dynamic scale, based on the observed values of the quality metrics of a corpus defined by all the versions of a
given ontology (life-cycle). In this work we explain how OQuaRE can be adapted for understanding the evolution of
ontologies. Its use has been illustrated with the ontology of bioinformatics operations, types of data, formats, and
topics (EDAM).
Conclusions: The two scales included in OQuaRE provide complementary information about the evolution of the
ontologies. The application of the static scale, which is the original OQuaRE scale, to the versions of the EDAM
ontology reveals a design based on good ontological engineering principles. The application of the dynamic scale has
enabled a more detailed analysis of the evolution of the ontology, measured through differences between versions.
The statistics of change based on the OQuaRE quality scores make possible to identify key versions where some
changes in the engineering of the ontology triggered a change from the OQuaRE quality perspective. In the case of
the EDAM, this study let us to identify that the fifth version of the ontology has the largest impact in the quality
metrics of the ontology, when comparative analyses between the pairs of consecutive versions are performed.
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Palabras clave/Materias: Ontology quality Ontology metrics Oquare Ontology repositories |
Tipo de documento : info:eu-repo/semantics/article |
Derechos de acceso: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI : 10.1186/s13326-016-0091-z |
Publicado en: Journal of Biomedical Semantics, Vol. 7, Nº63 (2016) |
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos - Estadística, Matemáticas e Informática
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