ppy/RuleStandards_chat-transcript_unedited_20140109a.txt ------ Chat transcript from room: ontolog_20140109 2014-01-09 GMT-08:00 [PST] ------ [9:15] PeterYim: Welcome to the = Joint RulesReasoningLP (s05) and OntologyBasedStandards (s07) mini-series session - 2014_01_09 = Program: A Joint session for the Ontology, Rules, and Logic Programming for Reasoning and Applications (RulesReasoningLP) mini-series and the OntologyBasedStandards mini-series Topic: Rule Standards: CommonLogic, RuleML, and RIF Session Co-chairs: * Professor HaroldBoley (U of New Brunswick), * Mr. MikeDean (Raytheon BBN Technologies), and * Professor AdrianPaschke (Freie Universitat Berlin) Panelists / Briefings: * Professor MichaelGruninger (IAOA; U of Toronto) - "Common Logic Second Edition" * Professor AdrianPaschke (RuleML; Freie Universität Berlin) - "The RuleML Perspective on Deliberation-Reaction Standards" * Professor MichaelKifer (W3C/RIF; Stony Brook University) - "The Rule Interchange Format and Its Dialects" Logistics: * Refer to details on session page at: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2014_01_09 * (if you haven't already done so) please click on "settings" (top center) and morph from "anonymous" to your RealName * Mute control (phone keypad): *7 to un-mute ... *6 to mute * Attn: Skype users ... see details at: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2014_01_09#nid438V ** you may connect to (the skypeID) "joinconference" whether or not it indicates that it is online (i.e. even if it says it is "offline," you should still be able to connect to it.) ** if you are using skype and the connection to "joinconference" is not holding up, try using (your favorite POTS or VoIP line, etc.) either your phone, skype-out or google-voice and call the US dial-in number: +1 (206) 402-0100 ... when prompted enter Conference ID: 141184# ** Can't find Skype Dial pad? *** for Windows Skype users: Can't find Skype Dial pad? ... it's under the "Call" dropdown menu as "Show Dial pad" *** for Linux Skype users: please note that the dial-pad is only available on v4.1 (or later) if the dialpad button is not shown in the call window you need to press the "d" hotkey to enable it. . == Proceedings == . [9:06] anonymous morphed into Pipauwel [9:16] PeterYim: hello, Pipauwel ... Welcome! ... please morph into your RealName (in wikiword format) via the "Settings" button/link ... thank you. [9:19] anonymous morphed into AndreaWesterinen [9:23] Pipauwel morphed into PieterPauwels [9:23] PieterPauwels: okay, just did that [9:23] PieterPauwels: thank you [9:26] PeterYim: Thank you, Pieter [9:28] anonymous morphed into AmandaVizedom [9:31] anonymous morphed into ConradBock [9:31] MikeBennett: I am muted locally buzz isn't me? [9:31] MikeBennett: I'll redial [9:32] MikeBennett: Did it stop? Was using joiconference [9:32] AmandaVizedom: phew! [9:32] AmandaVizedom: It did stop, Mike [9:32] MikeBennett: Odd. I could hear it too, which is odd if one is the originator of a noise. [9:32] anonymous morphed into TaraAthan [9:33] anonymous morphed into PaulTyson [9:33] anonymous morphed into AdrianPaschke [9:34] anonymous2 morphed into MichaelKifer [9:34] AliHashemi1 morphed into AliHashemi [9:34] anonymous1 morphed into BiplabSarker [9:34] AmandaVizedom: Lots of background noise today. Perhaps people with stuff going on around them could mute locally, if they don't need to speak now. [9:34] anonymous morphed into PeteRivett [9:34] MikeBennett: Any quieter? Muted locally of course. [9:35] AmandaVizedom: Normal level of background noise now. The star wars effects went away. :-) [9:36] MikeBennett: T. [9:36] anonymous morphed into DennisPierson [9:37] anonymous morphed into BobbinTeegarden [9:37] anonymous morphed into Paul Fodor [9:37] anonymous morphed into AnatolyLevenchuk [9:38] anonymous1 morphed into Steve Mandl [9:38] Steve Mandl morphed into SteveMandl [9:41] PeterYim: == HaroldBoley started the session ... [9:41] anonymous morphed into BenjaminGRosof [9:41] anonymous1 morphed into ElizabethFlorescu [9:41] PeterYim: == MichaelGruninger presenting ... refer to slides under: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2014_01_09#nid438F [9:46] LeoObrst3: @MichaelGruninger: do you have an example of something in the Universe of Reference that is not in the Universe of Discourse? [9:47] LeoObrst3 morphed into LeoObrst [9:48] PeterYim: @MikeBennett ... apologies, it was HensonGraves' phone line, and not yours, that was injecting the hum earlier! [9:49] AnatolyLevenchuk: What about OMG SBVR (it is ontology standard with reference to Common Logic too)? [9:49] MikeBennett: @Peter No worries, I changed as many things as I could anyway. [9:50] PeterYim: @MichaelGruninger: slide#5 - OntIOp ("OMG" instead of "ISO") ... will supply an update to this slide [9:50] TaraAthan: @Leo- the universe of discourse is simply the subset of the universe of reference that quantifier range over. It is a matter of design. An upper ontology could use a domain of reference containing (only) spatial entities, and have a parthood relation P that describes the mereology. The symbol P does not denote any spatial entity, so it is in the universe of reference, but not in the universe of discourse. [9:50] PeterYim: ^OntoIOp [9:51] anonymous morphed into Tom Tinsley [9:53] anonymous morphed into JohnMcClure [9:53] anonymous morphed into JoelBender [9:56] anonymous morphed into RexBrooks [10:01] ToddSchneider: Michael, when the CL update is finalized will it be made available without charge? [10:04] PeterYim: == AdrianPaschke presenting ... [10:05] MichaelGruninger: @ToddSchneider -- yes, it will be available without charge, but you will need to access it through the ISO website and agree to the copyright terms specified there. [10:08] TaraAthan: The free version of the current CL standard can be accessed through this page: http://iso-commonlogic.org/ [10:31] Harold Boley: Michael K is now on slide 4. [10:32] LeoObrst: Thanks, Tara. What if you wanted a family of P part relations, and wanted to quantify over those: then P would go into the universe of discourse? That's quantifying over relations, however. Maybe my example here is somewhat contrived. [10:34] MichaelGruninger: @LeoObrst: Yes, that is what is going on in slide 14 (titled Segregated and Unsegregated Dialects) [10:35] BenjaminGRosof: It will be interesting to figure out the Rulelog angle of the open CL semantic/syntactic issues. of the semantic and syntactic issues listed for CL by Michael Gruninger [10:35] LeoObrst: @AdrianPaschke: can you only have negation-as-failure for Reaction rules? Or also a form of logical negation? [10:35] PeterYim: == MichaelKifer presenting ... [10:35] PeterYim: ... now on slide#7 [10:37] BenjaminGRosof: (continuing): One such issue for Rulelog may be circularity in inclusion (KB import). [10:45] PeterYim: ^... slide#12 had "blanked out" issues ... re-started [10:50] LeoObrst: @MichaelKifer: if one wanted to map between CL and RIF, I guess it would be to the RIF-FLD, right? Has that been considered? [10:53] BenjaminGRosof: In regard to RIF dialects development: Also, one of the first dialects drafted under RIF FLD is for Rulelog (earlier called SILK). Currently this is being developed via RuleML, with probable submission to W3C and Oasis. [10:54] BenjaminGRosof: SILK project was one of the first implementations of RIF-BLD. [10:55] ToddSchneider: Michael, Was is the prognosis for commercial support for CL? In particular reasoners? [10:57] Bob Kowalski2: Are inductive definition included in Common Logic? [10:57] TaraAthan: Actually it is possible to have a segregated dialect and still quantify over *some* relations (like hilog.) [10:58] Harold Boley: @Benjamin, is your Q about CL or RIF? [10:58] MichaelGruninger: @BobKowalski: No, inductive definitions are not covered by Common Logic. [11:01] BenjaminGRosof: my question is about CL [11:01] TaraAthan: yes [11:02] PaulTyson: @MKifer on slide 20 all hyperlinks go to w3c rif-bld spec. [11:03] MichaelKifer: @PaulTyson: sorry, the FLD link should be changed: bld->fld [11:05] PeterYim: @SteveMandl - I don't think I have a record of your email address and affiliation. Will you be kind enough to drop me a note about that please. =ppy [11:06] SteveMandl: @PeterYim Joel is taking blame for this... [11:08] AdrianPaschke: have to leave now to catch my train. [11:08] AlexShkotin: @Peter, it should be interesting to invite Hets project somebody to talk:-) [11:08] AdrianPaschke: @Leo: negation in the definition of complex event definitions (event patterns) is typically an event operator, which means this event should not occur within an interval of events or time intervals. Negation can also occur in the condition part of reaction rules. Here it can be negation as failure as in normal logic programs or strong negation as in extended logic programs. There are also extensions of production rules for complex event processing where the negation is a kind of inflationary negation. [11:08] AmandaVizedom: Glad to hear that, in CL, things like provenance that are currently in (non-machine-useful) annotations will likely be represented semantically, machine-readably, and therefore presumably available for reasoning. [11:10] BenjaminGRosof: @MichaelKifer: how would the example on Michael Gruninger's slide 10 be treated in Rulelog, i.e., in Hilog? [11:10] AdrianPaschke: if you have questions about RuleML I will respond later via the chat or you can send me an email. bye. [11:10] MichaelKifer: @Benjamin: I need to think about MG's slide 10. [11:15] LeoObrst: Related to my question about a mapping between CL and RIF-FLD, perhaps the mapping between those should actually occur in OntoIOP? [11:15] AliHashemi: @MichaelGruninger - do you know if the PrIKL project is still under development? http://prikl.sourceforge.net/ [11:16] TaraAthan: In hilog, don't you have to explicitly state that the new relation is a hilog relation? [11:23] AmandaVizedom: @BenjaminGrosof, MichaelGruninger -- this is important: the mapping itself happens in a theory, and the original one need not inherit from it. [11:24] PaulTyson: Is it off-topic to ask who is using these languages (or another rule language) in an industrial (not academic) application? Which language(s)? Why (or why not)? What for? [11:30] AliHashemi: I'm unsure there is a fundamental disagreement. Theories can extend or interpret one another in a variety of ways. Being able to track and exploit conservative extensions leads to a lot of useful outcomes... [11:30] MichaelGruninger: @AliHashemi: I am not sure about the current status of PrIKL. We should contact Fabian Neuhaus [11:30] AliHashemi: (I guess I got lost as to where the disagreement is) [11:31] AlexShkotin: @PaulTyson session 2013_12_19 was very interesting. [11:32] PaulTyson: @Alex thanks, I have not caught up on all the preceding sessions. [11:32] TaraAthan: RIF-FLD is not a language. You would have to define a particular specialization before using OntoIop to map it to CL. [11:33] PeterYim: Great session! [11:33] PeterYim: Join us again, same time, next Thursday, when we will be featuring the OntologySummit2014 Launch Event, on 16-Jan-2014 ... mark your calendars and watch out for further announcements and developing details at: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2014_01_16 [11:33] LeoObrst: Thanks, all. Very good session! [11:33] AmandaVizedom: I agree Ali. I think the initial disagreement arose from a difference in the kind of uses people were thinking of; there seems to be agreement on the general point that you can usefully have nonconservative extension when you have the right kind of awareness / specification of the (non)-inheritance relations between the original and extension-including theories. [11:33] AmandaVizedom: Thanks all [11:33] AliHashemi: @Ben and @MichaelK, I'm unsure what the position is re conservative extensions [11:33] MichaelKifer: @Tara: You are right. One needs to define a CL dialect as a specialization of FLD [11:34] PeterYim: -- session ended: 11:32am PST -- [11:34] AlexShkotin: @Paul, may be here http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2013_12_19 [11:34] TaraAthan: @MK - it would be an interesting exercise. [11:35] AliHashemi: It seems useful that any system should be able to discriminate what type of extensions or mappings two theories have to one another. [11:36] MichaelKifer: @AlexS: I guess, we agreed to disagree. Our position is that it we don't think that the mappings should be conservative extensions, but, if necessary, the mappings can be restricted to ensure that they are conservative. [11:36] TaraAthan: @Ali- yes. The original CL semantics did not allow a choice. In the revision, there is a choice. [11:37] AmandaVizedom: @Ali - yes, and that is essential to defining modules, imports, interoperability, spindle structures, etc. But I think it is also true that it gets insufficient attention (in that people do mapping without tending to it. [11:37] AlexShkotin: C u:-) [11:44] List of attendees: AdrianPaschke, AlexShkotin, AliHashemi, AliHashemi1, AmandaVizedom, AnatolyLevenchuk, AndreaWesterinen, BenjaminGRosof, BiplabSarker, Bob Kowalski, Bob Kowalski1, Bob Kowalski2, BobbinTeegarden, ConradBock, DennisPierson, ElizabethFlorescu, Frank Olken, GenZou, Harold Boley, HassanAitKaci, HensonGraves, JoelBender, JohnMcClure, JonathanBona, KenBaclawski, LeoObrst, LeoObrst1, LeoObrst2, LeoObrst3, Marwan Ghabin, MichaelGruninger, MichaelKifer, MikeBennett, MikeDean, NancyWiegand, Paul Fodor, PaulTyson, PeteRivett, PeterYim, PieterPauwels, Pipauwel, RexBrooks, Roy Bell, Steve Mandl, SteveMandl, SteveMandl1, TaraAthan, Todd Pehle, ToddSchneider, Tom Tinsley, TomTinsley, TomTinsley1, VictorAgroskin, anonymous, anonymous1, anonymous2, vnc2 ------