Drivers for the development of an Animal Health Surveillance Ontology (AHSO).

Journal: Preventive veterinary medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

Comprehensive reviews of syndromic surveillance in animal health have highlighted the hindrances to integration and interoperability among systems when data emerge from different sources. Discussions with syndromic surveillance experts in the fields of animal and public health, as well as computer scientists from the field of information management, have led to the conclusion that a major component of any solution will involve the adoption of ontologies. Here we describe the advantages of such an approach, and the steps taken to set up the Animal Health Surveillance Ontological (AHSO) framework. The AHSO framework is modelled in OWL, the W3C standard Semantic Web language for representing rich and complex knowledge. We illustrate how the framework can incorporate knowledge directly from domain experts or from data-driven sources, as well as by integrating existing mature ontological components from related disciplines. The development and extent of AHSO will be community driven and the final products in the framework will be open-access.

Authors

  • Fernanda C Dórea
    Department of Disease Control and Epidemiology, National Veterinary Institute, Sweden. Electronic address: fernanda.dorea@sva.se.
  • Flavie Vial
    Epi-Connect, Skogås, Sweden.
  • Karl Hammar
    Department of Computer Science and Informatics, Jönköping University, Sweden; Department of Computer and Information Science, Linköping University, Sweden.
  • Ann Lindberg
    Department of Disease Control and Epidemiology, National Veterinary Institute, Sweden.
  • Patrick Lambrix
    Department of Computer and Information Science and Swedish e-Science Research Centre, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden. patrick.lambrix@liu.se.
  • Eva Blomqvist
    Department of Computer and Information Science, Linköping University, Sweden.
  • Crawford W Revie
    Atlantic Veterinary College, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada.