Replies: 3 comments 10 replies
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Not an expert opinion, but my 2 bits:
As long as it's formally captured and can be referenced, yes. I think of it like, those entities 'matched' using that pattern, but the same pattern may not lead to the same 'match' unless the metadata can be replicated (especially the versions for all involved). Having 'mapped' a term ought to be a controlled and precisely equivalency. |
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OHDSI says: https://www.ohdsi.org/web/wiki/doku.php?id=documentation:vocabulary:mapping
I think its fine to use it for both, but I just want to be clear about the fact that "people are performing a matching activity which results in a mapping" is a sentence that makes some sense. |
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Dear all,
Just a few thoughts:
- I agree that it is unnecessary to distinguish whether a matching
(process) is automated or manual by using a different term for it. Those
would be subclasses of "matching".
- I also use "alignment" in a holistic way: the full set of mappings
(tuples) found between two ontologies by a matching process.
Perhaps we could run a survey about the uses of these terms by researchers?
It would be quite easy to reach out the Ontology Matching community, if we
wanted to get a broader view of what is out there.
Best,
Catia
…On Sat, May 7, 2022, 9:05 AM Nico Matentzoglu ***@***.***> wrote:
Yeah, I merely suggested this distinction as I feel that matching in
general parlance is "automated". From your comments throughout I gather you
would favour ditching the notion of matching throughout in favour of
using mapping for everything (the tuple, the process)?
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In an offline discussion with @graybeal and @cpesquita we were looking at trying to at least roughly agree on what we mean my
mapping
and what we mean bymatching
. My related tweet revealed a lot of different ways to put it, but the overarching theme to me seems that the string "mapping" typically refers to a tuple, a "continuant" if you will, while "matching" is a process which may or may not result in a tuple.Obviously there also is an activity called "mapping", and here is where my problem starts. According to some of the respondents on twitter and @cpesquita the difference between "mapping" and "matching" is in practice a bit unclear. Some people were emphasising the "automated" aspect of "matching". What I want to know is:
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