Difference between
version 32
and
version 31:
Line 82 was replaced by line 82 |
- [#1] The term "SpatialSpeciesDistributionModel" is highly specialized. In practice, such terms are more likely than not described, or "built from" existing terms and ontology structures. For example, the notion of a "Model" may be explicitly captured by an ontology, where a "Model" is a composite structure having multiple parts. In this example, the term "SpatialSpeciesDistributionModel" may be explicitly defined within the ontology, or even implicitly defined by the annotation itself as being a __Model__ that __computes__ a __SpatialMap__ __from__ a set of __SpatialDistribution__ __of__ __Species__. |
+ [#1] The term "SpatialSpeciesDistributionModel" is highly specialized. In practice, such terms are more likely than not described, or "built from" existing terms and ontology structures. For example, the notion of a "Model" may be explicitly captured by an ontology, where a "Model" is a composite structure having multiple parts. In this example, the term "SpatialSpeciesDistributionModel" may be explicitly defined within the ontology, or even implicitly defined by the annotation itself as being a ''Model'' that ''computes'' a ''SpatialMap'' ''from'' a set of ''SpatialDistribution'' ''of'' ''Species''. |
Back to Semantics In Kepler,
or to the Page History.
|