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Environmental Terminology System and Services (ETSS) June 2007.

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Presentation on theme: "Environmental Terminology System and Services (ETSS) June 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 Environmental Terminology System and Services (ETSS) June 2007

2 EPA’s System of Registries A series of registries that help manage key business objects Most are authority files: –Chemicals and substances –Facilities –XML Schema/Tags Newly added Environmental Terminology System and Services (ETSS) will address topical terminology

3 Why Terminology? Why Terminology? So that we know what we mean –Key business terms and acronyms So we can find stuff –Indexing, cataloging, keyword management Others are counting on us –Emergency response –Other Federal Gov’t –International efforts Gary Larson – The Far Side

4 EPA’s History of Terminology EPA Terminology Reference System (www.epa.gov/trs) –Searchable repository –Over 250 distinct vocabularies; over 11,000 terms Environmental regulations and laws EPA Program glossaries and term lists GEneral Multilingual Environmental Thesaurus (GEMET) –Significant limitations Limited search capability Lacks web services Lacks editing functionality Doesn’t support multilingual capability Insufficient for concept management

5 What Is the ETSS? Search & Discovery Portal – a tool to find, use, and download terminology Terminology Management – a repository of important terms with user interfaces for creation, storage, maintenance, harmonization, and distribution of various types of terminology Automated Services – Web interfaces and services to allow exchanges of terminologies with Agency and partner systems Collaborative Stewardship – a framework for the development of vocabulary-specific workflows and processes

6 Key ETSS Customers Human Customers –EPA vocabulary developers like the Web Taxonomy Project –Policy makers defining terms in regulations –System developers selecting XML tags and defining data elements –Program managers and researchers seeking to develop and use terms and glossaries –Non-EPA vocabulary developers interested in environmental terms –Anyone needing to understand environmental terminology –Stakeholders, partners and the public System Customers –Search engines – to expand searches or provide the basis for taxonomies or folders –Enterprise content management – source of value domains and controlled vocabularies –Other systems that use pick lists or taxonomies

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9 Login for EPA and Partners

10 ETSS High-Level Data Model Vocabulary (Relationship Definitions, Rules, Versions, Contact Information for Stewards & Owners) Terms Standard Attributes (Definitions, Source, Language) EPA Custom Attributes (Notes fields, etc.) Relationship Links (Narrower Than, Broader Than, Equivalent, and EPA-Custom Relationships to be Defined)

11 Current Status Where We’re At Dow Jones’ Synaptica KMS software selected Editorial system in production Over 250 vocabularies and 11,000 terms migrated New Web Taxonomy created and maintained Supporting development of EPA Quality Glossary Training sessions held for editors Next Steps Develop public end-user interface Establish governance and workflow Integrate with SOR and other systems Develop strategy for moving toward a concept-based system

12 Knowledge Organization Continuum

13 What is Concept Management? Organizing terms around core concepts in a business, domain or enterprise Goals:* –Articulate clear and concise meanings of business domain concepts –Achieve a shared understanding of the concepts among relevant stakeholders, and –Guard the stability of a concept ’ s meaning during system development Major activities:* –Scoping the environment of discourse –Concept specification, integration and enforcement *Bleeker, et al “The Role of Concept Management in System Development – A Practical and Theoretical Perspective” 2003. http://www.cs.ru.nl/Research/reports/full/NIII-R0330.pdf

14 Concept Management and the Semantic Web The Semantic Web is an extension of the current web in which information is given well-defined meaning, better enabling computers and people to work in cooperation. It is all about: Managing concepts More explicit meaning Structure and standards Tools and infrastructure

15 Where do we want to go? ETSS supports the ability to connect multiple vocabularies: –Put an umbrella concept system over all the vocabularies to which the individual terms can be linked –Increase the links between terms, including across vocabularies –Create richer relationships between terms –Continue to add definitions –Develop tools for comparing terms and definitions

16 For More Information Contact either: Linda Spencer EPA Office of Information Collection spencer.linda@epa.gov (202) 566-1651 Michael Pendleton EPA Office of Information Collection pendleton.michael@epa.gov (202) 566-1658 “Commentary.” Government Computer News – August 14, 2006


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