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Information Integration: A Status Report

Information Integration: A Status Report. Alon Halevy University of Washington, Seattle IJCAI 2003. Mediated Schema. Entity. Sequenceable Entity. Structured Vocabulary. Experiment. Phenotype. Gene. Nucleotide Sequence. Microarray Experiment. Protein. OMIM. HUGO. Swiss- Prot. GO.

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Information Integration: A Status Report

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  1. Information Integration:A Status Report Alon Halevy University of Washington, Seattle IJCAI 2003

  2. Mediated Schema Entity Sequenceable Entity Structured Vocabulary Experiment Phenotype Gene Nucleotide Sequence Microarray Experiment Protein OMIM HUGO Swiss- Prot GO Gene- Clinics Locus- Link Entrez GEO Query: For the micro-array experiment I just ran, what are the related nucleotide sequences and for what protein do they code?

  3. Motivation and Activity • Application areas of data integration: • Enterprise information integration ($$) • The government • Data sources on the web • Scientific data sharing. • Several data sharing architectures: • Virtual data integration, warehousing, message-passing, web-services. • Many research projects: • Mine: Information Manifold, Tukwila, LSD, Piazza. • EII: a new industry buzzword.

  4. Today’s Agenda • Recent progress • Mediation languages • Query processing (XML and other) • Some lessons from commercial world. • Current challenges • Enabling large-scale data sharing: peer-data management systems. • The age of problem: semantic heterogeneity. • A new agenda item for AI: corpus-based KR. • AI is more vital than ever for progress here!

  5. Q Q’ Q’ Q’ Q’ Q’ Source Source Source Source Source Mediation Languages Goal: Language for Specifying Semantic Relationships (not full FOL) Mediated Schema Assume: data at the sources is structure (or seems so).

  6. Source Source Source Source Source Global-as-View (GAV) Actor(x,y) :- R1(x,y,z) Actor(x,y) :- R2(x,z), R3(z,y) Mediated Schema Title, Actor,… R1 R2 R3 R4 R5

  7. Source Source Source Source Source Local-as-View (LAV,GLAV) R1(x,y,z) :- Title(x,y), Actor(x,z), y< 1970 R5(x,y,z) :- Movie(x,y,”French”) Mediated Schema Title, Actor … R1 R2 R3 R4 R5

  8. Mediation Languages: Summary • A lot of nice theory and practical algorithms. • Careful choice of expressive power mattered. • Algorithms for answering queries using views are in every commercial DBMS. • Description Logics – also an attractive formalism for mediation. • Bottleneck is coming up with the mapping expressions.

  9. Outline • Recent progress • Mediation languages • Query processing (XML and other) • Some lessons from commercial world. • Current challenges • Enabling large-scale data sharing: peer-data management systems. • The age old problem: semantic heterogeneity. • A new agenda item for AI: corpus-based KR.

  10. Adaptive Query Processing • Problem: no stats, network unstable • Cannot ‘Plan and then execute’ • Need to adapt plan during execution. • Ideas already in • Ingres (1976) (early database system) • Interleaving planning and execution (AI) • Key question: when and granularity of adaptation: • For every tuple? Materialization points? • See [Ives et al. 2002] for our solution.

  11. I2 O2S2 I0 O0S0 I1 O1S1 “Cleanup” query plan I2S2 I0 O0 O1S1 Convergent Query Processing[Ives et al., 2002] Join In-stock,Orders, Shipping (I  O  S) IOS IO

  12. XML Query Processing • XML facilitates integration. • Mediator query processor may manipulate XML directly. • Challenges: • XML is not flat, but nested; Path queries. • Can be irregular; doesn’t adhere to a strict schema. • Progress: • Defining and optimizing XQuery. • Going back and forth: XML to relational.

  13. The Commercial World • Some startups: • Nimble, MetaMatrix, Calixa, Composite, Enosys • Big guys making announcements: • IBM, BEA, MS, (Oracle still being defiant). • Integration technology in different layers: • E.g., reporting companies want it (Actuate) • Progress: analysts have buzzword -- EII. • Challenges: • Integration with EAI? • Yet another middleware? • Horizontal vs. vertical?

  14. What Worked? • Performance was not an issue. • Tools, tools, tools • For managing sources and creating mediated schemas. • XML query processing was needed. • Concordance: need common keys to join sources: • Active research area!

  15. Outline • Recent progress • Mediation languages • Query processing (XML and other) • Some lessons from commercial world. • Current challenges • Enabling large-scale data sharing: peer-data management systems. • The age old problem: semantic heterogeneity. • A new agenda item for AI: corpus-based KR.

  16. Q Q’ Q’ Q’ Q’ Q’ Source Source Source Source Source Limitations of Mediated Schema Mediated Schema

  17. Peer Data-Management • PDMS: a network of peers (data sources) • Peers can: • Export base data, or combinations of data • Serve as logical mediators for other peers • A peer can be both a server and a client. • Semantic relationships are specified locally(between small sets of peers). • This is a Semantic Web (different angle)

  18. Q’’ Q’ Q’’ Q’’ Q Q’’ Q’ Network of Mappings (Piazza) CiteSeer UW Stanford GAV, LAV GLAV DBLP Paris Roma Vienna

  19. Advantages of PDMS • No need for a central mediated schema. • Can map data opportunistically, as is most convenient. • Queries are posed using the peer’s schema. Answers come from anywhere in the system. • Infrastructure for Semantic Web applications • This is not P2P file sharing. • Data has rich semantics • Membership is not as dynamic.

  20. Q’’ Q’ Q’’ Q’’ Q Q’’ Q’ Schema Mediation for PDMS When can LAV and GAV be combined to form such a network structure? (semantics not yet obvious. CiteSeer UW Stanford GAV, LAV GLAV [ICDE-03], [WWW-03 for XML] DBLP Paris Roma Vienna

  21. Q’’ Q’ Q’’ Q’’ Q Q’’ Q’ Efficient Query Answering • Problems: • redundant paths • expensive reformulation. CiteSeer UW Stanford • Possible solution: • Pre-compose some paths DBLP Paris Roma Vienna

  22. Mapping Composition[Jayant Madhavan and Halevy, VLDB 2003] • Incredibly subtle! • In general, composition can be an infinite set of GLAV formulas. • Results: • Finite in many cases • Even when infinite, often has finite, useful encoding. • Hence, compositions can usually be pre-optimized.

  23. Q’’ Q’ Q’’ Q’’ Q Q’’ Q’ Other Research Issues Intelligent data placement Management of mapping networks Improving networks: finding additional connections. Handling inconsistencies CiteSeer UW Stanford DBLP Leipzig Saarbruecken Berlin

  24. PDMS-Related Projects • Hyperion (Toronto) • PeerDB (Singapore) • Local relational models (Trento) • Edutella (Hannover, Germany) • Semantic Gossiping (EPFL Zurich) • Raccoon (UC Irvine) • Orchestra (Ives, U. Penn)

  25. Outline • Recent progress • Mediation languages • Query processing (XML and other) • Some lessons from commercial world. • Current challenges • Enabling large-scale data sharing: peer-data management systems. • The age old problem: semantic heterogeneity. • A new agenda item for AI: corpus-based KR.

  26. Hotel, Restaurant, AdventureSports, HistoricalSites Hotel, Gaststätte Brauerei, Kathedrale Lodges, Restaurants Beaches, Volcanoes Schema/Ontology Matching Schema heterogeneity: a key roadblock for information integration • Different data sources speak their own schema • Mapping is key to any data sharing architecture Data Source Consumer Mediator Data Source Data Source

  27. Schema Matching Books Title ISBN Price DiscountPrice Edition Authors ISBN FirstName LastName Schema Matching: Discovering correspondences between similar elements Eventually… BooksAndMusic(x:Title,…) = Books(x:Title,…)  CDs(x:Album,…) BooksAndMusic Title Author Publisher ItemID ItemType SuggestedPrice Categories Keywords BookCategories ISBN Category CDCategories ASIN Category CDs Album ASIN Price DiscountPrice Studio Inventory Database A Artists ASIN ArtistName GroupName Inventory Database B

  28. Typical Approaches • Multiple sources of evidences in the schemas • Schema element names • BooksAndCDs/Categories ~ BookCategories/Category • Descriptions and documentation • ItemID: unique identifier for a book or a CD • ISBN: unique identifier for any book • Data types, data instances • DateTime  Integer, • addresses have similar formats • Schema structure • All books have similar attributes • Use domain knowledge In isolation, techniques are incomplete or brittle Combine multiple techniques to exploit all available evidence

  29. Philosophy of Solutions • Effective schema matching requires a principled combination of techniques. • Like human experts, the matcher should improveover time • LSD: • Mapping data sources to a mediated schema. • Use a few mappings as training examples to learn hypotheses for elements of the mediated schema. • See [Doan et al., SIGMOD-2001, MLJ-2003] • Next step: corpus-based matching.

  30. Music Books Authors Authors Items Artists Publisher Information Litreture CDs Categories Artists Corpus of Books and Inventory Schemas Identify common concepts and patterns Reuse extracted information to match new schemas Books, Authors, Publishers, … Books Title, Author, Price, Publisher Corpus-Based Matching Collection of schemas and mappings

  31. Learners:extract knowledge from schemas and mappings Learned models:for each unique element in any schema. Schemas and mappings: accumulated over time Mapping Knowledge Base Data Instances Learner Structure Learner Name Learner Data Type Learner Description Learner Meta Learner C1 CN NL:… DIL:… DTL:… DL:… SL:… ML:… NL:… DIL:… DTL:… DL:… SL:… ML:… Mapping Knowledge Base

  32. Preliminary results: Corpus is useful

  33. With and without the corpus

  34. Outline • Recent progress • Mediation languages • Query processing (XML and other) • Some lessons from commercial world. • Current challenges • Enabling large-scale data sharing: peer-data management systems. • The age old problem: semantic heterogeneity. • A new agenda item for AI: corpus-based KR.

  35. Corpus vs. Traditional KR • A large corpus of uncoordinated knowledge fragments vs. • Carefully designed knowledge base Can a corpus offer a more attractive solution for some KR problems?

  36. Pause: KR vs. Corpus • Knowledge base: • Hard to engineer, brittle at the boundaries • Only one way of saying things. • Corpus: • “Easier” to build, coverage not predefined. • Many views of the domain. • See proceedings for full argument.

  37. Corpus-based KR • Contents: • Schemas, ontologies, meta-data, data, queries, mappings. • Collect statistics on the corpus: • How often does a word appear as a relation name? • When it does, what tend to be the attribute names? What other tables are there? • Support a KR-style interface on the corpus (OKBC-like)

  38. Other Applications of C-B-KR • Question answering on the web • Focused crawling • Natural language interfaces to DB’s • Schema and ontology authoring • Semantic query optimization. • Whenever we need knowledge to help us rank multiple answers/plans.

  39. Example Queries • How are two terms related? • GPA(studentID, $value), • Student(studentID, GPA, address) • Find different ways of saying the same: • Class(Lexus, Luxury) • LuxuryCar(Lexus, Toyota) • When do two terms play similar roles? • IJCAIReview(p1, rev2, accept) • AIJReferees(round2, p3, rev4, reject)

  40. Challenges for C-B-KR • Building the corpus. • How focused should the corpus be? • Is human tuning needed or helpful? • How do we accommodate inference? • How do we leverage traditional KR?

  41. Summary • The vision: data authoring, querying and sharing by everyone. • We got the plumbing to work. To go further, we need AI techniques. • Challenge: cross the structure chasm: • It’s hard to author & query structured data! • PDMS: architecture for ad-hoc sharing. • Ontology/schema matching is key! • Are we providing the right tools? • Corpus-based knowledge representation. • We need benchmarks!

  42. Some References • www.cs.washington.edu/homes/alon • Piazza: ICDE03, WWW03, VLDB-03 • The Structure Chasm: CIDR-03 • Mediation surveys: VLDB Journal 01 • Lenzerini tutorial. • Schema matching: • Rahm and Bernstein, VLDB Journal 01. • Workshops: IJCAI, Semantic Web Conf. • Teaching integration to undergraduates: SIGMOD Record, September, 2003.

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