- From: Matthias Samwald <samwald@gmx.at>
- Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2010 23:32:27 +0100
- To: "Jim McCusker" <james.mccusker@yale.edu>, Matthias L�be <matthias.loebe@imise.uni-leipzig.de>
- Cc: <public-semweb-lifesci@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <2459C5063F3A4373BB51C83CA961BF47@zetsu>
Jim wrote: "Like it or not, they were probably thinking of HL7 and ISO 21090. We would need to show how semweb solutions are a better solution, or how it is tied too much to healthcare, leaving out life sciences, population science, chemistry, etc. We don't yet have *a* solution for this, we have several. :-) " Besides the fact that HL7 et al. are already better established in the current healthcare IT infrastructure than RDF/OWL, it does not seem too hard to come up with reasonable arguments in favour of RDF/OWL. I also read other seemingly RDF-friendly pieces of text in that document: "As mentioned, ONC's CDA is a foundational step in the right direction. However, the thrust of CDA seems largely that it be an extensible wrapper that can hold a variety of structured reports or documents, each with vocabulary �controlled metadata. While this shares many features with the universal exchange language that we envisage, it lacks many others. In particular, it perpetuates the record� centric notion that data elements should "live" inside documents (albeit metadata tagged). We think that a universal exchange language must facilitate the exchange of metadata tagged elements at a more atomic and disaggregated level, so that their varied assembly into documents or reports can itself be a robust, entrepreneurial marketplace of applications. In a similar vein, we view the semantics of metadata tags as an arena in which new players can participate (by "publishing"), not as one limited to a vocabulary controlled by the government" Cheers, Matthias Samwald // DERI Galway, Ireland // Information Retrieval Facility, Austria // http://samwald.info
Received on Tuesday, 14 December 2010 22:33:01 UTC