2021-10-21 Meeting notes

Date

Oct 21, 2021

Participants

  • @Edmond Chuc (Unlicensed)

  • @TERN Data (Guru)

  • @Habacuc FM (Unlicensed)

  • @Javier Sanchez

  • @Lachlan Charles

  • @Elisa Girola (Unlicensed)

  • @Anusuriya Devaraju (Unlicensed) (Apologies)

  • @Simon Cox

Goals

 

Discussion topics

Time

Item

Presenter

Notes

Time

Item

Presenter

Notes

 

Darwin Core discussions around Sample and Specimen

 

  • Balance between usage as a vocabulary of concepts or a formal ontology model

  • Most Darwin Core users aren’t familiar with classes

  • Related note - Darwin Core is based on the vocabulary structure of Dublin Core Terms



Catch up with Peter Wilson - Soil information modelling work



  • Guru had a catch up

  • Simon will also have a catch up

  • … to discuss about information models

 

Revised version of the Yellow Book is underway by Andrew Biggs, Chair of NCST from Dept. of Natural Resources, Mines and Energy

 

 

Feature types

 

 

 

How do we open up the TERN Ontology to others for adoption?

 

 

 

DAWE project and the November deliverable

 

  • Easier adoption and interpretation by scientists and survey data collectors

  • Spreadsheets

  • Maybe we just need tooling on top of Linked Data and Semantic Web

    • TERN Ecosystem Surveillance is creating an app , for example

  • Paradigm shift from Semantic Web to something else?

    • Relational design

    • CSV/spreadsheets

    • Will it help engaging with users?

  • The TERN Ontology is primarily used for data exchange for most of the other stakeholders. End users may not need to be concerned about the data exchange format.

  • Maybe look at how industry is tackling this problem. Most websites provide http://schema.org markup without issues, which the format is in JSON-LD.

  • WA data is collected by consultants, which need to be submitted to the BDR.

    • They may not have the technical expertise to supply the data by JSON-LD/RDF.

  • CUAHSI use CSV to tackle the problem of adoption

  • Tool used by curators at TERN for vocabulary.

Action items

Decisions

We at TERN acknowledge the Traditional Owners and Custodians throughout Australia, New Zealand and all nations.
We honour their profound connections to land, water, biodiversity and
culture and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.

TERN is supported by the Australian Government through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy, NCRIS.