[Taxacom] The Semantic Web and LOD would allow everyone to contribute without needing a huge "ministry of truth"

Peter DeVries pete.devries at gmail.com
Mon Nov 15 19:06:21 CST 2010


Thank you Chris,

I originally posted this after reading the thread that suggested that we
need some master ministry of truth that we are all slaves to.

For example: "you must use this classification", or this particular name.

It is not as if I am against this in theory it is just that the people who
will control this will have gotten their position via one selection process,
while the person who might provide the "best" answer operates under a
different selection process.

There is alternative and that would be to let everyone expose their data and
opinions and have the wisdom of the crowd determine who is the most
credible.

This would not crush differences of opinion etc, since they will still
persist in the cloud.

Respectfully,

- Pete

On Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 4:22 PM, Chris Thompson <xelaalex at cox.net> wrote:

>   Thanks, Pete:
>
> Please note that I did add the caveat about peer-review not being perfect.
>
> Yes, for examples,
>
> what can you do when there are NO peers, or
> what can you do, when all the “peers” believe in the same paradigm, such as
> the creation “scientists,” who reveiwed a clearly non-scientific paper on
> creationism and approved its publication.
>
> So, yes, you are correct, in that peer-review when possible set a MINIMUM
> standard before publication.
>
> And, yes, the most important part of the scientific process is the
> subsequent testing, re-testing, etc., of published hypotheses. That is,
> SCIENCE.
>
> Peer-review is the minimal FILTER to save time of real scientists from
> having to test bogus hypotheses, etc.
>
>  Enjoyed your comments. They are very useful to focus our thoughts.
>
>  Sincerely,
>
>  Chris
>
>   *From:* Peter DeVries <pete.devries at gmail.com>
> *Sent:* Monday, November 15, 2010 4:36 PM
> *To:* Stephen Thorpe <stephen_thorpe at yahoo.co.nz>
> *Cc:* Chris Thompson <xelaalex at cox.net> ; taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu<Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu>
> *Subject:* Re: [Taxacom] The Semantic Web and LOD would allow everyone to
> contribute without needing a huge "ministry of truth"
>
>  I am proposing you simply ignore the LOD data that you are unsure about.
>
> The data you do trust and use is cited in your derivative work.
>
> How many journal reviewers type in the manuscripts lat and long values to
> see if they are where they are supposed to be?
>
> How many journal reviewers have access to the original data to they can
> test the validity of an analysis?
>
> - Pete
>
> On Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 3:04 PM, Stephen Thorpe <
> stephen_thorpe at yahoo.co.nz> wrote:
>
>>  peer review is a pre-publication process, often done under time pressure
>> by people who may not be good "details" people
>>
>> the function of peer review, as I understand it, is just to make sure that
>> anything published is up to a MINIMUM standard
>>
>> surely, the real deal comes after publication, when the publication can be
>> scrutinised at length by anybody and everybody in their own time - that is
>> when the crap gets filtered out ...
>>
>>  ------------------------------
>> *From:* Peter DeVries <pete.devries at gmail.com>
>> *To:* Chris Thompson <xelaalex at cox.net>
>> *Cc:* "taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu" <Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu>
>> *Sent:* Tue, 16 November, 2010 9:41:46 AM
>> *Subject:* Re: [Taxacom] The Semantic Web and LOD would allow everyone to
>> contribute without needing a huge "ministry of truth"
>>
>> Hi Chris,
>>
>> The peer review comes in when others decide to cite your contribution or
>> choose not to cite your contribution.
>>
>> The version can be determined by the date stamp on the record, and perhaps
>> some sort of checksum.
>>
>> I was thinking of mainly in reference to species occurrence records,
>> checklists etc.
>>
>> However, I have been wondering how someone could responsibly peer review a
>> taxonomic description without access to the specimens?
>>
>> Also for many taxa there are very few people who could properly review a
>> description.
>>
>> Often the only living expert is the author.
>>
>> More often than not, no one dares to really examine and revise the
>> description until after the author has died.
>>
>> - Pete
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 2:29 PM, Chris Thompson <xelaalex at cox.net> wrote:
>>
>> > Sorry, Pete,
>> >
>> > But while that may appear to be "very democratic," etc., but
>> >
>> > the hallmark of Science, as opposed to everything, is PEER-REVIEW.
>> >
>> > Yes, we do know there are problems with peer-review, but it remains the
>> > only mechanism to ensure that the public gets the BEST and most
>> appropriate
>> > SCIENCE. [that has remained true since Henry Oldenburg started
>> publishing
>> > the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society in 1665]
>> >
>> > And the other thing that peer-review mandates, is version control. That
>> is,
>> > once the process is done, that version becomes a fixed point in the
>> > Scientific process.
>> >
>> > Your approach sound much like the wikipedia, wikispecies, etc., where
>> > anything can be throw out online and the Public may think it is Science.
>> >
>> > Yes, ICZN does not require peer-review. And only the minimal scientific
>> > standards. So, your suggestion would allow everyone to contribute at
>> least
>> > in terms of names and nomenclatural acts once the ICZN recognizes and it
>> is
>> > should digitial / online publication. But it will not serve the Public
>> well.
>> >
>> > There is an old adage from the early days of computers, GIGO. Garbage
>> IN,
>> > Garbage OUT. This remain very true today, so SCIENCE needs to be careful
>> or
>> > it will lose its respect from the Public.
>> >
>> > Oh, well ...
>> >
>> > Chris
>> >
>> >
>> > -----Original Message----- From: Peter DeVries
>> > Sent: Monday, November 15, 2010 2:56 PM
>> > To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
>> > Subject: [Taxacom] The Semantic Web and LOD would allow everyone to
>> > contribute without needing a huge "ministry of truth"
>> >
>> >
>> > On of the features of the semantic web and the Linked Open Data cloud is
>> > that they allow anyone who can post markup data to a web server to
>> > contribute.
>> >
>> > You  simply markup your data at a particular URL and then ping the
>> semantic
>> > web to tell everyone that it is there.
>> >
>> > http://pingthesemanticweb.com/
>> >
>> > This would allow individual institutions and individuals to contribute
>> > their
>> > own data.
>> >
>> > Very democratic.
>> >
>> > If you don't agree with a particular contribution then just choose to
>> > ignore
>> > it in your analysis.
>> >
>> > Respectfully,
>> >
>> > - Pete
>> >
>> > --
>> > ---------------------------------------------------------------
>> > Pete DeVries
>> > Department of Entomology
>> > University of Wisconsin - Madison
>> > 445 Russell Laboratories
>> > 1630 Linden Drive
>> > Madison, WI 53706
>> > TaxonConcept Knowledge Base <http://www.taxonconcept.org/> / GeoSpecies
>> > Knowledge Base <http://lod.geospecies.org/>
>> > About the GeoSpecies Knowledge Base <http://about.geospecies.org/>
>> > ------------------------------------------------------------
>> > _______________________________________________
>> >
>> > Taxacom Mailing List
>> > Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
>> > http://mailman.nhm.ku.edu/mailman/listinfo/taxacom
>> >
>> > The Taxacom archive going back to 1992 may be searched with either of
>> these
>> > methods:
>> >
>> > (1) http://taxacom.markmail.org
>> >
>> > Or (2) a Google search specified as: site:
>> > mailman.nhm.ku.edu/pipermail/taxacom  your search terms here
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------
>> Pete DeVries
>> Department of Entomology
>> University of Wisconsin - Madison
>> 445 Russell Laboratories
>> 1630 Linden Drive
>> Madison, WI 53706
>> TaxonConcept Knowledge Base <http://www.taxonconcept.org/> / GeoSpecies
>> Knowledge Base <http://lod.geospecies.org/>
>> About the GeoSpecies Knowledge Base <http://about.geospecies.org/>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>> _______________________________________________
>>
>> Taxacom Mailing List
>> Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
>> http://mailman.nhm.ku.edu/mailman/listinfo/taxacom
>>
>> The Taxacom archive going back to 1992 may be searched with either of
>> these methods:
>>
>> (1) http://taxacom.markmail.org
>>
>> Or (2) a Google search specified as:  site:
>> mailman.nhm.ku.edu/pipermail/taxacom  your search terms here
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
> --
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
> Pete DeVries
> Department of Entomology
> University of Wisconsin - Madison
> 445 Russell Laboratories
> 1630 Linden Drive
> Madison, WI 53706
> TaxonConcept Knowledge Base <http://www.taxonconcept.org/> / GeoSpecies
> Knowledge Base <http://lod.geospecies.org/>
> About the GeoSpecies Knowledge Base <http://about.geospecies.org/>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>



-- 
---------------------------------------------------------------
Pete DeVries
Department of Entomology
University of Wisconsin - Madison
445 Russell Laboratories
1630 Linden Drive
Madison, WI 53706
TaxonConcept Knowledge Base <http://www.taxonconcept.org/> / GeoSpecies
Knowledge Base <http://lod.geospecies.org/>
About the GeoSpecies Knowledge Base <http://about.geospecies.org/>
------------------------------------------------------------



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