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Cognitive Aspects of Practical Ontology Design

Tutorial CAOD 2007. Cognitive Aspects of Practical Ontology Design. Tatiana Gavrilova / Dmitry Kudryavtsev Saint-Petersburg State Polytechnical University, tgavrilova@gmail.com Business Engineering Group, Russia, dmitry.ku@gmail.com. Kudryavtsev Dmitry dmitry.ku@gmail.com.

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Cognitive Aspects of Practical Ontology Design

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  1. Tutorial CAOD 2007 Cognitive Aspects of Practical Ontology Design Tatiana Gavrilova / Dmitry Kudryavtsev Saint-Petersburg State Polytechnical University, tgavrilova@gmail.com Business Engineering Group, Russia, dmitry.ku@gmail.com

  2. Kudryavtsev Dmitry dmitry.ku@gmail.com Cognitive aspects of practical ontology design CAOD 2007 Part 2. What and How (as is) Ontologies in organizational design Business Engineering Group SPb

  3. Outline 1. Applying ontologies to organizational design 2. Organizational ontologies design 3. Example 1: Business Organization Ontology 4. Example 2: Public administration ontology Summary Acknowledgements References

  4. Ontology-based organizational modeling Ontology as a conceptual basis of organizational model. Organizational modeling • Public administration modeling • Public administration ontology • Business organization modeling • Business organization ontology • Other organizations modeling • Other organizations ontologies (Future)

  5. Structured Administrative documents Х Structured Administrative documentsY Ontology-based organizational model Knowledge acquisition forms Analytical reports Query answering Local knowledge acquisition organizational models Internal Representation Organizational modeling approach – Viewpoint 1 Knowledge Process Distribution Use Formalization Creation and Acquisition

  6. Organizational modeling approach – Viewpoint 2 Knowledge Process Distribution Use Formalization Creation and Acquisition Text X Text Y Ontology-based organizational model Tables X Tables Y Graphics X Graphics Y Pseudo-Graphics Internal Representation

  7. Organizational modeling approach – Viewpoint 3 Knowledge Process Distribution Формали- зация Formalization Creation and Acquisition Use Ontology Views X Общая формализованная модель организации Ontology-based organizational model Ontology Views Y

  8. formalize acquire distribute ORG-MASTER (Business version) / GOV-MASTER (Public Administration version) Software support Organizational modeling software support Knowledge Process Distribution Формали- зация Formalization Creation and Acquisition Use Ontology Views X Общая формализованная модель организации Ontology-based organizational model Ontology Views Y

  9. WHY organizational modeling ? • Purpose of ontology-based organizational model: • consistency of organizational administrative documents • support organizational analysis • support controlling of business rules in the field of organizational design • easy organizational redesign • reasonable decisions • holistic understanding of organization and interrelations • organizational knowledge base Agile organization Risks reduction Efficiency growth

  10. Outline 1. Applying ontologies to organizational design 2. Designing organizational ontologies 3. Example 1: Business Organization Ontology 4. Example 2: Public administration ontology Summary Acknowledgements References

  11. 2 approaches for 2 levels of organizational ontology Application organizational ontology Upper-level ontology Different requirements Different methods of design Different software support Level of abstraction Low-level ontology /-ies

  12. Knowledge Structuring software support Upper-level ontology • Requirements specification • Search for re-use opportunities • Glossary development • Laddering • Defining non-hierarchical relations and attributes • Refinement Low-level ontology/-ies • Mind mapping software • ORG-Master / GOV-Master • Mind mapping software • Mind mapping software • ORG-Master / GOV-Master • Mind mapping software • ORG-Master / GOV-Master • Excel • Concept mapping • software • Mind mapping software • Concept mapping software • ORG-Master / GOV-Master

  13. Outline 1. Applying ontologies to organizational design 2. Organizational ontologies design 3. Example 1: Business Organization Ontology (BOO) 4. Example 2: Public administration ontology (PAO) Summary Acknowledgements References

  14. Upper-level Business organization ontology design example

  15. Requirements specification / BOO - Upper-level Upper-level ontology Application purpose Strategic design Organizational re-design Business process improvement Administrative regulations Holistic improvement of management system Role of ontology Provide systematic (holistic) analysis Communication Explanation and Understanding Meta-model (schema) for organizational model and views Key requirements Cognitive ergonomics Meaningful and persuasive (Explicitness of organizing principles) Knowledge model integrity Ready for extensions: Reflect current and future prospective scope Correspond to viewpoints / methods Correspond to purpose and scope Organizational fitness (history, habits, maturity of organization)

  16. Synthesis of ad-hoc conceptual top-level model - Process Organization Environment Control Business Concept Organization Input Output Functioning Mechanism Performance management Information resources Control Material resources Input Output Functioning Production Financial resources Output Mechanism play role Human resources Organizational Structure Infrastructure

  17. Business organization ontology - Upper-level (Overview)

  18. Business organization ontology - Upper-level (Detailed)

  19. Problem Oriented top-level model Management viewpoint Corporate Governance Strategy development Organizational Design Managing Improvement and Change Improvement and Change Business Organization Operations Internal Resources

  20. Problem Oriented Ontology View Knowledge architecture Information Architecture HR-architecture Technical Architecture Financial Architecture Corporate governance Codes Expectations Vision Strategic development Policies Strategic measures Strategic and business goals Business Organization Ontology Organizational design Functional goals Operating measures Business Rules Organizational Structure Functions and Processes Managing improvement and change Strategic Objectives Strategic Initiatives Improvement objectives Improvement Initiatives Improvement and Change Improvement and Change Projects Operations Processes Internal resources

  21. Defining non-hierarhical relations / BOO – Upper-level

  22. Low-level Business organization ontology design example

  23. Requirements specification / BOO - Low-level • Application purpose • Organizational re-design • Analysis of functions completeness • Administrative regulations • Creation and support of documents regulating responsibilities • Business process improvement • Designing the process of management of organizational internal projects • Implementation of the process of management of organizational internal projects • Check for functions completeness in the field of management of organizational growth projects • Role of ontology • Search for elements • Easy-to-use administrative documents • Comparison with good practice • Method-oriented reports from organizational model (ontology views) • Key requirements • Easily understood • Standardization (general, standard templates) • Transparent conceptual choices • Correspond to purpose and scope • Organizational fitness (history, habits, maturity of organization) Low-level ontology/-ies

  24. Top-down specification / BOO Low-level Classificator: Functions Tree List Unstructured List

  25. Template-based generalization - Check for functions completeness / BOO Low-level Tree List Unstructured List • PMBOK • (Project Management Body of Knowledge) • 2004

  26. Check for functions completeness / BOO Low-level 2-dimension template:

  27. Define non-hierarhical relations / BOO – Low-level Relations: Functions – Organizational Roles Relations as a matrix Relations in lists Relations as a diagram Full Related

  28. Part 2. Outline 2.1.Applying ontologies to organizational design 2.2 Organizational ontologies design 2.3 Example 1: Business Organization Ontology 2.4 Example 2: Public administration ontology* Summary Acknowledgements References *This ontology is part of the research project «Federal, regional and local authorities modeling» funded by Ministry for Economic Development and Trade of the Russian Federation within the Federal Budget Program “Electronic Russia”. Project performers: “Business Engineering Group – Saint-Petersburg” State University the Higher School of Economics

  29. Requirements specification / PAO – Upper-level • Application purpose • Optimization of authorities Structure and Functioning • Division of jurisdiction between levels of control (federal, regional, municipal) • Structural division of the performers of functions related to the adoption of regulatory legal acts, the control and supervision, the management of state property and the provision of public services • Creation and support of responsibilities regulating documents • Administrative regulation of authorities’ procedures • Performance management implementation in authorities • Increase transparency of authorities • Create knowledge base • Role of ontology • Provide systematic (holistic) analysis • Communication • Explanation and Understanding • Meta-model (schema) for organizational model and views • Method-oriented reports (views) from organizational model • Key requirements • Cognitive ergonomics • Meaningful and persuasive (Explicitness of organizing principles) • Knowledge model integrity • Ready for extensions: Reflect current and future prospective scope • Correspond to viewpoints / methods • Correspond to purpose and scope • Organizational fitness (history, habits, maturity of organization) • Strict compliance with country laws Upper-level ontology

  30. Public administration ontology- Upper-level (Overview)

  31. Public administration ontology- Upper-level (Detailed)

  32. Summary of part 2. • Harmony works as an ideal / visionand a guideline for the analysis in practice. • If you use ontology for communications, explanations, trainings and education then it must be easy to grasp, understand and remember. • Suggested cognitive approach is scalable and adaptable for different levels of complex ontology.

  33. References • Kudryavtsev D., Grigoriev L., Kislova V., Zablotsky A. Using org-master for knowledge based organizational change, International Journal “Information Theories & Applications”, 2006, Volume13, Number 2. • Kudryavtsev D. From context to knowledge: consecutive mapping ontologies and contexts, 6th International Conference on Knowledge Management, 6-8 September, 2006, Graz, Austria. • Grigoriev L. Federal, regional and local authorities modeling, Ministry for Economic Development and Trade of the Russian Federation research project, 2006 (in Russian). • Gomez-Perez A. Ontologies: Theory, methods and tools. Tutorial. The Fourth Summer School on Ontological Engineering and the Semantic Web, 2006 (SSSW'06). http://torresq.dia.fi.upm.es/sssw06/frames.jsp • Aldo Gangemi Ontology Evaluation and Validation Tutorial. The Fourth Summer School on Ontological Engineering and the Semantic Web, 2006 (SSSW'06). http://torresq.dia.fi.upm.es/sssw06/frames.jsp • Rainey Hal G. Understanding and Managing Public Organizations, Jossey-Bass, 2003 • Schreiber G., Akkermans H., Anjewierden A., R. de Hoog, Shadbolt N., W. van de Velde, Wielinga B. Knowledge Engineering and Management: The CommonKADS Methodology -, The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2000.

  34. References • Uschold M., King M., Moralee S. and Zorgios Y. The Enterprise Ontology AIAI, The University of Edinburgh, 1997. • Fox, M. S., Barbuceanu, M.; Gruninger, M.; Lin, J. An Organization Ontology for Enterprise Modelling. Simulating Organizations: Computational Models of Institutions and Groups, Menlo Park CA: AAAI/MIT Press, pp. 131-152. 1997. • Hepp M., Roman D. An Ontology Framework for Semantic Business Process Management, Proceedings of Wirtschaftsinformatik 2007, February 28 - March 2, 2007, Karlsruhe • Report on the State of the Art in Enterprise Modeling, University of Namur, 2002. (Project Unified Enterprise Modelling Language, Deliverable D1.1). • Sowa J.F., Zachman J.A. Extending and Formalizing the Framework for Information System Architecture. IBM System Journal, vol. 31, no. 3, 1992. • Project Management Body of Knowledge, American National Standard ANSI/PMI 99-001-2004 • FEA Consolidated Reference Model Document, FY07 Budget Formulation, 2005.

  35. Acknowledgements Business Engineering Group SPb • Grigoriev L. • Kislova V. • Yakubovskaya T. • Gorelik S. • Okorokova T. North-West State Politechnical University Spiridonov V. Ministry for Economic Development and Trade of the Russian Federation Makarevich M. State University the Higher School of Economics Zhulin A.

  36. Tatiana Gavrilova / Dmitry Kudryavtsev Saint-Petersburg State Polytechnical University, tgavrilova@gmail.com Business Engineering Group, Russia, dmitry.ku@gmail.com Design your ontologies on the visionary level! Questions? Comments?

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