Difference between revisions of "BittnerDonnelly"

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'''Spatial Ontology and Qualitative Reasoning'''
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July 20-21, 2009
 
July 20-21, 2009
  
Two-day Course
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Two-day Course organized as part of the Buffalo Ontology Week
  
'''Spatial Ontology and Qualitative Reasoning'''
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'''Faculty: Thomas Bittner and Maureen Donnelly'''
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----
 
This course will provide an introduction to a variety of theories developed for representing and reasoning about spatial relations among entities in the worldand. it will provide students with the tools for developing their own spatial ontologies. Theories treated will include:  
 
This course will provide an introduction to a variety of theories developed for representing and reasoning about spatial relations among entities in the worldand. it will provide students with the tools for developing their own spatial ontologies. Theories treated will include:  
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:i) mereotopologies (theories of parthood and connection relations),  
 
:i) mereotopologies (theories of parthood and connection relations),  
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:ii) theories of ordering relations,  
 
:ii) theories of ordering relations,  
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:iii) theories of distance relations.  
 
:iii) theories of distance relations.  
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We will examine also more complex spatial theories which introduce topics such as granularity, change in spatial relations over time, and spatial relations among classes of individuals.  
 
We will examine also more complex spatial theories which introduce topics such as granularity, change in spatial relations over time, and spatial relations among classes of individuals.  
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----
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'''Literature'''
  
'''Literature'''
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P. M. Simons, ''Parts: A Study in Ontology'', Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987.
The websites of Thomas Bittner (http://www.buffalo.edu/~bittner3), Maureen Donnelly (http://www.buffalo.edu/~md63), Barry Smith (http://ontology.buffalo.edu/), and the Leeds Qualitative Spatial Reasoning Group (http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/qsr/publications.html) are good sources of literature on spatial theories. In addition, the following contain material appropriate for this class:
 
P. Simons Parts: A Study in Ontology
 
R. Casati and A. Varzi Parts and Places
 
A. N. Whitehead Process and Reality
 
D. Hilbert The Foundations of Geometry
 
Interesting spatial theories which are appropriate for this class can also be found in the papers of Theodore de Laguna, E. V. Huntington, Alfred Tarski, Giangiacomo Gerla, Andrew Frank, Laure Vieu, Carola Eschenbach, and Hedda Schmitdke.
 
  
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R. Casati and A. Varzi, ''Parts and Places: The Structures of Spatial Representation'', Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999.
  
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Thomas Bittner
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[http://www.buffalo.edu/~bittner3 Thomas Bittner] is Assistant Professor in the Departments of Philosophy and Geography at the State University of New York at Buffalo. He is also Research Scientist in the New York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences. His research is in the area of formal ontology and its applications in bioinformatics, geography, and geographic information science.  His current research focuses on the application of formal ontology, symbolic logic, and qualitative representation and reasoning techniques (a) to represent canonical biomedical structures in biomedical ontologies, (b) to detect pathological structures in medical image analysis, and (c) to develop axiomatic theories of biomedical structures and processes across different levels of granularity.
  
Thomas Bittner is Assistant Professor in the Departments of Philosophy and Geography at the State University of New York at Buffalo. At the same time he is Research Scientist in the New York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences and the National Center of Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA).
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[http://www.buffalo.edu/~md63 Maureen Donnelly] is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Buffalo. Her research interests include metaphysics, formal ontology, qualitative spatial, temporal, and spatio-temporal reasoning, and bioinformatics.
Dr. Bittner received his Ph.D. from the Technical University Vienna and has been a postdoctoral researcher at Northwestern University and at Queen’s University (Canada). Before joining the SUNY Buffalo he was a senior researcher at the Institute for Formal Ontology and Medical Information Science (IFOMIS) at Saarland University in Germany.
 
Dr. Bittner’s area of specialization is formal ontology and its applications in bio-informatics, geography, and geographic information science.  His current research focuses on the application of formal ontology, symbolic logic, and qualitative representation and reasoning techniques (a) to represent canonical biomedical structures in biomedical ontologies, (b) to detect pathological structures in medical image analysis, and (c) to develop axiomatic theories of biomedical structures and processes across different levels of granularity.
 

Latest revision as of 03:11, 4 October 2008

Spatial Ontology and Qualitative Reasoning

July 20-21, 2009

Two-day Course organized as part of the Buffalo Ontology Week


Faculty: Thomas Bittner and Maureen Donnelly


This course will provide an introduction to a variety of theories developed for representing and reasoning about spatial relations among entities in the worldand. it will provide students with the tools for developing their own spatial ontologies. Theories treated will include:

i) mereotopologies (theories of parthood and connection relations),
ii) theories of ordering relations,
iii) theories of distance relations.

We will examine also more complex spatial theories which introduce topics such as granularity, change in spatial relations over time, and spatial relations among classes of individuals.


Literature

P. M. Simons, Parts: A Study in Ontology, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987.

R. Casati and A. Varzi, Parts and Places: The Structures of Spatial Representation, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999.


Thomas Bittner is Assistant Professor in the Departments of Philosophy and Geography at the State University of New York at Buffalo. He is also Research Scientist in the New York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences. His research is in the area of formal ontology and its applications in bioinformatics, geography, and geographic information science. His current research focuses on the application of formal ontology, symbolic logic, and qualitative representation and reasoning techniques (a) to represent canonical biomedical structures in biomedical ontologies, (b) to detect pathological structures in medical image analysis, and (c) to develop axiomatic theories of biomedical structures and processes across different levels of granularity.

Maureen Donnelly is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Buffalo. Her research interests include metaphysics, formal ontology, qualitative spatial, temporal, and spatio-temporal reasoning, and bioinformatics.