Data Semantics, Modeling and Ontologies: New Frontiers in Databases
Robert Meersman,
STARLab, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Abstract
The semantics, or meaning, of data and information have been a core issue
in databases and information systems for decades, but poses very tough
problems, only partially solved by techniques such as constraints, rules,
etc.. All forms of usable semantics are necessarily based on agreement
among all the system's users, designers and domain experts present --and
future. Such a challenge requires new tools that we claim are becoming
available under the form of computerized lexicons, thesauri, or more
generally ontologies. In the DOGMA Project at STARLab we study the
implications of this. We shall survey and compare some of the formal
definitions of ontologies in the literature and discuss their crucial
importance to systems design, implementation, interoperability and
maintenance. We claim such ontologies must be made simple, in order to
become standardized, and derive some architectural requirements from this.
This leads to possibly "new old" approaches for information system
methodologies, based on roles and contexts as first-class citizens. We try
to illustrate some of this e.g. in terms of -as well as at the expense of-
the recently released Open Information Model by the Metadata Coalition.
Biography
Professor Robert Meersman holds the Chair of Applied Informatics in the
Department of Computer Science of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium,
since 1995 and heads there the laboratory for Systems Technology and
Applications Research (STARLab). Previously he was professor at Tilburg
University in Holland. He is member and past Chair of IFIP working group
WG2.6 on Database and of IFIP's Technical Committee (TC-12) on AI. Robert
was one of the original developers of the NIAM (now ORM) methodology and
CASE tools, and has organized a number of conferences on Data Semantics
since 1985. He has a number recent publications on formal and
methodological aspects of data(base) semantics, as well as on more or less
related topics such as data mining, Web-based information systems and
digital libraries. Prof. Meersman's interests also include the use of
"hard" IT in culturally inspired applications such as education and museum
information systems.