A Core Ontology for Brazilian Higher Education Institutions
Cleiton Silva
1
and Orlando Belo
2
1
D.A.A., Federal Institute of Goiás, 75400-000 Inhumas-GO, Brazil
2
Algoritmi R&D Centre – School of Engineering, University of Minho, 4710-057 Braga, Portugal
Keywords: Ontologies, Semantic Web, Web Science, Ontology Networks, Linked Data, Institutional Evaluation,
Evaluation of Higher Education, SINAES.
Abstract: Within the past several years, Linked Open Data has reached a significant position in the Web, allowing for
a significant increase of structured data in this domain. Although this, there are a lot to be done in order to
ensure an effective way for supporting publication of connected open data. One of the strongest research and
development line in this area appeals to the use of ontologies for structuring data and their relationships.
Ontologies can be modeled for organizing knowledge about a domain, facilitating its sharing and reuse. As
such, we have been developed an ontology especially oriented to support the organizational structure of higher
education institutions in Brazil. This ontology was prepared for measuring and providing essential concepts
and reference models that can be used by different stakeholders to develop and use ontologies and
vocabularies for the National Higher Education Assessment System in Brazil. In this paper we present and
discuss the most relevant aspects we approached during the conceptualization and development of the referred
ontology.
1 INTRODUCTION
A Higher Education Institution (HEI) is a kind of
organization that operates in the field of higher
education. Like any other institution, a HEI exists for
pursuing the objectives established in the different
legal instruments, which in theory represent the
expectations of a national or a supranational society
that instituted them. Higher education in general, and
in particular the results achieved by HEI, attracts the
interest of different social actors (Bandeira et al.,
2015; Dias Sobrinho, 2010; Firmino, 2013).
In recent years, especially after the approval of
Law 12.527 of November 18, 2011 (Brasil, 2011),
known as the Law on Access to Information (LAI),
several documents and data related to the Brazilian
higher education field are being published on the Web
in different formats and without a reference
conceptualization. Thus, the reuse of such resources
for the production of new knowledge is quite limited,
particularly when one wishes to process them using
some kind of computational resource.
Problems such as these occur in different domains
as more data are produced, published and reused on
the Web. According to (O’Hara and Hall, 2011), the
Web Science community has been studying and
developed technologies in order to guarantee the
sustainability of the Web.
The Semantic Web (Berners-Lee, 2000; Berners-
Lee et al., 2006; Gruber, 2008; Sack et al., 2016;
d’Aquin and Motta, 2016) is a set of technologies
designed to make Web resources increasingly
suitable for the consumption of people and machines.
In (Silva and Belo, 2017) the authors highlight the
main contributions of the Semantic Web to the
implementation of the Data Web. In this work we are
particularly interested in the technologies and tools
used to add explicit semantics to datasets to be
published on the Web.
Ontologies have been used in different
applications domains, conferring explicit semantics
and models for knowledge representation, both for
the classic Web and for the new approaches where the
Web is increasingly as a very promising data
publishing platform (Silva and Belo, 2017).
However, a careful literature review as well as the
research carried out to date in the field did not identify
any specific ontology developed with the objective of
facilitating data interoperability in the domain of the
National Higher Education Assessment System
(SINAES).
Silva, C. and Belo, O.
A Core Ontology for Brazilian Higher Education Institutions.
DOI: 10.5220/0006792103770383
In Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Computer Supported Education (CSEDU 2018), pages 377-383
ISBN: 978-989-758-291-2
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All r ights reserved
377
Thus, we believe that is quite opportune and
relevant to develop an initiative research where we
could offer theoretical and empirical contributions,
both in terms of knowledge advancement in ontology
engineering and in terms of data treatment and
exploration activities on the Web, as well as for the
improvement of production processes and
consumption of data in the field of higher education
in Brazil.
In this paper, we present a proposal of an ontology
especially oriented to support the organizational
structure of HEI in Brazil. This ontology is being
developed for measuring and providing essential
concepts and reference models that can be used by
different stakeholders to develop and use ontologies
and vocabularies for the SINAES domain. The
ontology proposed is integrated in a network of
ontologies OntoSINAES, which is under
development in the course of a research project, in
which we intend to implement an environment for the
collaborative development of ontologies and
vocabularies for the domain of the SINAES. Thus,
following this brief introduction, in section 2, we
present a literature review about ontologies in Web
Science domain, highlighting some relevant works. In
section 3, we present and discuss the ontology
proposal, exposing its theoretical basis and the
empirical results already achieved. Finally, in section
4, we present conclusions and point out some lines for
future research and development.
2 RELATED WORK
The importance of the Web to today's society stems
from advances in knowledge promoted by a
community of researchers dedicated to making
electronic information gradually less ambiguous for
people and computers. This combination of efforts
enhance the expression “Web Science”, which is used
for representing a recent multidisciplinary area
dedicated to advance the knowledge about the Web,
both in terms of the technologies involved, and in
terms of the various aspects involving its
understanding as a specific phenomenon that affects
different dimensions of the current society (O’Hara
and Hall, 2011; Hendler et al., 2008; Hall and
Tiropanis, 2012). In this work, we are interested in
two different paradigms, namely: the Semantic Web
and Linked Data (or Linked Open Data). The
Semantic Web (Berners-Lee, 2000; Berners-Lee et
al., 2001; Berners-Lee et al., 2006) has been proposed
and is being developed with the aim to make the
content of the Web more suitable for use both for
people and computers. Ontologies occupy a central
position in the conceptual model of the Semantic
Web. In (Horrocks, 2002), Horrocks considers that
ontologies can offer important contributions for a
sustainable evolution of the Semantic Web, mainly by
providing explicit semantics to the contents available
on the Web, which favors their functioning from
precisely defined sources of terms. Linked Data is a
set of principles proposed by (Berners-Lee, 2006) for
the publication of data on the Web. Linked Open Data
is a movement within the World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C) community, which aims to make
the connected data available, free of charge.
Combining these both ideas, we come to the Web
paradigm as an open and connected data platform.
Based on the main ideas of the article, we will use the
terms “data connected” and “data open and
connected” for referring Linked Data and Linked
Open Data, respectively. According to the W3C
(Anon, 2017), “Web of Data will become a reality
when: (1) there is an enormous amount of data
available, and (2) exists a standard format accessible
and manageable by semantic Web tools.” In this
sense, additionally to the Resource Description
Framework (RDF), as a standard format, it is also
necessary to ensure free access to data and to all the
relationships that may exist among them, in order to
have effectively open and connected data. In some
perspectives, the RDF standard provides the basis for
the publication of connected data, while ontologies
and vocabularies provide the basis to formalize the
different relationships between the data in a way that
makes them quite useful. Many authors highlight the
importance of ontologies, both in terms of
guaranteeing higher levels of interoperability among
data, and for providing semantic enrichment of
knowledge bases.
The literature review has revealed several works
(O’Leary, 2010; Reynolds, 2014a; Pereira and
Almeida, 2014; Abramowicz et al., 2008) dealing
with the use of ontologies for providing
organizational conceptual models and in some cases
especially oriented for the field of higher education
(Falbo et al., 2014; Zemmouchi-Ghomari and
Ghomari, 2013; Styles and Wallace, 2008; Pereira,
2015). The following is a brief summary of three
papers, which deal specifically with organizational
structures. For each of the cases described there, we
try to point out an adequate interface to this work. The
ontology published in (Reynolds, 2014) is a
conceptual reference model for organizational
structures recommended by the W3C, in order to
support the publication of connected data. It should
be noted that this organizational ontology was
CSEDU 2018 - 10th International Conference on Computer Supported Education
378
designed to be generic, reusable and extended, and
thus it is available for access in several formats,
through the link https://www.w3.org/TR/
vocabOrg/#organizational_structure. Considering
our objective for developing a conceptual reference
model for representing the organizational structure of
Brazilian HEI, the ontology proposed by the W3C
was used as a starting point for the development of
the core ontology designed by us. Some authors
emphasize that corporate ontologies are useful for
many purposes, among which support the publication
of connected data. According to (Falbo et al., 2014),
an enterprise ontology should be: (1) flexible, to
allow specialization in specific ontology projects; (2)
broad, to the point of covering the whole application
field; and (3) modular, so that only relevant fragments
can be selected for each specific reality of the domain
to be conceptualized. The authors of this work
demonstrated their points of view through an
ontology of the Brazilian Federal Universities.
Our work extends the domain described by the
ontology proposed in (Falbo et al., 2014), but dealing
also with the other types of HEI. Finally, we
discovered in (Pereira, 2015) a proposal of an
organizational reference ontology, specified in a
meta-model and conceived in accordance with the
ontological distinctions of the Unified Ontology
Fundamental (UFO), which extends the social
concepts of UFO-C (Guizzardi, 2005). This core
ontology, called OntoUML Organizational Ontology
(O3), was designed for using as a reference model in
the definition of organizational structures. One of the
objectives of O3 is to support the creation of domain
ontologies through the specialization of its concepts
and relations (Pereira, 2015). In this work – similar to
what we are developing –, the author presents a model
of the domain of the active structure of organizations.
As so, the conceptual model of O3 has become an
ontological resource quite relevant to the
development of the ontology we present and discuss
in this paper. According to what was possible to note
in our literature review, we may conclude that the use
of ontologies for representing organizational
structures, besides being feasible, can offer relevant
contributions for producing and consuming open and
connected data on the Web.
3 THE ONTOLOGY
Ontologies have been the object of study of several
works since the antiquity. In the last few years, many
concepts of ontologies have been presented and
defended by several authors within the Computer
Science (Guizzardi, 2005; Gruber, 1993; Guarino,
1995; Noy and McGuinness, 2001; Almeida, 2013;
Guarino, 1998). However, we can see an ontology as
a logical theory that explains the intended meaning of
a formal vocabulary, which is its ontological
commitment to a particular conceptualization of the
world (Guarino, 1998). Take this into consideration
we develop the main theoretical foundations and a
meta-model for the core ontology we present and
discuss in this paper, with the objective of providing
a minimum conceptualization of references for the
organizational structure of Brazilian HEI. Core
ontologies occupy an intermediate position between
the superior (or foundation) ontologies and domain
ontologies. In general, core ontologies rely on
foundation ontologies to add real world semantics to
conceptual models, avoiding ambiguities and making
them more independent of the domain. The
development of this core ontology is being based on
Methodology for Building Ontology Networks
(NeOn) (Suárez-Figueroa, 2010).
3.1 Requirements Specification
The core ontology we are presenting here aims to
provide a semantic model to represent formally the
IES organizational structure, covering all the general
concepts referenced in the legislation that regulates
the SINAES – as reference ontology, it must be
formal and implemented in OWL DL version 2. The
ontology was designed in a way that any intelligent
agent interested in the production, use or reuse of
information about higher education in Brazil could be
use it, involving knowledge about the organizational
structures of HEI. At this stage requirements
specification we prepared and generated the
correspondent Ontology Requirements Specification
Document (ORSD) for the ontology. In this document
we included a set of non-functional requirements
(general aspects not related directly to the content of
the ontology) and a set of functional requirements.
The non-functional requirements were defined taking
into account the motivation and the scope of this
work. They are:
RNF-01 the ontology should be described
and documented in Portuguese.
RNF-02 all the concepts related to the
ontology will be classified according to the
ontological categories defined by the Unified
Foundational Ontology (UFO) (Guizzardi,
2005), (Guizzardi et al., 2008), using the
OntoUML language for development,
verification and validation of the model
(Albuquerque and Guizzardi, 2013).
A Core Ontology for Brazilian Higher Education Institutions
379
RNF-03 the ontology should be implemented
in OWL DL version 2;
RNF-04 the ontology should formally
integrate the OntoSINAES ontology network.
Table 1: Competence questions for the initial iteration.
The functional requirements were specified based on
a set of competency questions (CQ), formulated
based on a thorough analysis of the concepts and
relationships between them that were verified in legal
texts regulating higher education in Brazil and
directly related to the structure of HEI. The initial set
of functional requirements was considered stable and
adequate for the purposes of a first iteration of the
core ontology lifecycle we designed. The initial CQ
set was obtained essentially from the analysis of the
Law 10.861, from April 14, 2004 (Brasil, 2004),
which is known as the SINAES Law. Then all the CQ
were grouped into several categories, each one
representing different aspects of the organizational
structure of HEI. In order to facilitate the
understanding of the domain, these categories
represent ontology modules that may guide the
development of specific ontologies in the future. The
set of functional requirements, in the form of CQ, was
then submitted to a validation process, based on the
verification of the criteria suggested by the NeOn
methodology, namely concision, correction,
consistency and lack of ambiguities. Domain experts
attended the validation process. Finally, the
requirements were prioritized in order to be satisfied
in two iterations. In Table 1, we can find the CQ
defined to be answered at the end of the first iteration,
grouped into categories. The last step of the ontology
specification process was the organization of a pre-
glossary of terms directly related to CQ, their
responses and named entities.
3.2 Project Planning
The design of the ontology project was based on
ORSD. At this stage we tried to organize in a timely
manner the different processes and activities to be
executed during the development process of the
ontology. The lifecycle model chosen it is based by
an incremental iterative approach. Thus, this work
takes as reference the execution of the first iteration,
which included several scenarios of NeOn, namely
the scenarios 1, 2 and 3 (Suárez-Figueroa, 2010,
p.83).
To choose the life cycle model and the respective
scenarios, we considered a specific set of CQ and
non-functional requirements. Given the complexity
of the domain of SINAES and the diversity of the
organizational structures that are established among
the Brazilian HEI, we decide for reusing non-
ontological resources, which can be found in official
information sources such as government websites,
particularly the Brazilian Portal of Open Data (Brasil,
2017), and the laws and other official documents
related to SINAES. As for the ontological resources,
in this first iteration we had by reference the
ontologies proposed in (Reynolds, 2014; Pereira,
2015). In Figure 1, presents a general overview of the
main phases of the first iteration of the ontology
development project life cycle.
Competence Questions
(
CQ
)
CQ Answers
CQ-001:
What are the Brazilian
HEI classified as
university institution?
Listing of all the
institutions that act in the
offer of higher education
in Brazil, which have the
legal prerogatives of
university and university
cente
r
.
CQ-002:
What are the Brazilian
HEI classified as
university?
Listing of all the
institutions that act in the
offer of higher education
in Brazil, which have the
legal prerogatives of
universit
y
.
CQ-003:
What are the Brazilian
HEI classified as
university center?
Listing of all the
institutions that act in the
offer of higher education
in Brazil, which have the
legal prerogatives of
universit
y
cente
r
.
CQ-004:
What are the Brazilian
HEI classified as non-
university?
Listing of all the
institutions that act in the
offer of higher education,
which according to the
Brazilian legislation are
considered as non-
universit
y
HEI.
CQ-005:
Who is the sponsor of the
HEI?
An individual or legal
entity that provides the
necessary resources for the
o
p
eration of the HEI.
CQ-006:
Which are the regulatory
acts that classify HEI as
university, university
center and non-university
HEI?
Relation of regulatory acts
of HEI accreditation and
re-accreditation.
CSEDU 2018 - 10th International Conference on Computer Supported Education
380
Figure 1: The development project life cycle model.
The NeOn methodology prescribes for the life cycle
based on an incremental iterative model, an initial
phase that is oriented to the elaboration of a global
development plan, containing a set of basic ontology
requirements. Subsequently, during the initiation
phase of each iteration, the detailed iteration
planning, a review of the set of initial requirements,
and the overall development plan are carried out.
Each iteration can be regulated for one of the five
versions that the cascade model provides in the NeOn
methodology. For the first iteration of this project we
chose the cascade model with six phases, taking into
account the need for reengineering the ontological
and non-ontological resources.
3.3 Conceptualization and
Formalization
In these phases we produced the conceptual and
formal models of the ontology. For the production
and validation of the models, we used the OntoUML
Lightweight Editor OLED tool (Ufes, 2017). The
OntoUML language is a profile of the Unified
Modeling Language (UML), with an ontological
basis based on the UFO ontology. The tool allows for
constructing and validating the conceptual models in
OntoUML, and generating automatically their
implementations in RDF, OWL and UML.
In Figure 2, we can see a fragment of the
conceptual model of the ontology we developed.
Figure 2: A fragment of the conceptual model of the
ontology.
The fragment presented highlights some of the most
essential concepts of the organizational structure and
organizational roles, which together make up the
abstract concept of a Brazilian HEI. The concept of
HEI specializes the concept of organization (Firmino,
2013; Brasil, 2011). Like any other kind of
organization, HEI are social agents explicitly
instituted to develop higher education in Brazil. The
HEI concept was specialized in institution and
academic units. An institution is a type of formal
organization, recognized by the external
environment, while an academic unit is an
organizational unit, recognized in the internal context
of an institution. Academic units represent the
working groups of an institution. The model also
indicates that an HEI is accredited at the moment of
its constitution, as a university, university center or as
a non-university. At the time of its existence,
regulatory acts will determine the maintenance or
change of its classification.
3.4 COrg Ontology: Implementation
The portion of knowledge of the domain of SINAES
that in the previous stage was organized in a formal
and well-founded conceptual model, in this phase was
transformed into a computable model, using the
Protégé tool (Musen and Team, 2015). Based on the
ORSD, the ontology language used was the OWL DL
version 2.
Because it is a core ontology, the relationships
between concepts and formal properties in the
conceptual model were enriched with new constraints
and axioms, aiming to increase the ontology's
expressiveness and inference capacity. The ontology
implemented in this work is the first version of the
Core Ontology of the HEI organizational structure in
Brazil (COrg).
In Figure 3, we present the main classes that are
already part of the ontology.
Figure 3: A screenshot of the COrg for HEI in Brazil.
A Core Ontology for Brazilian Higher Education Institutions
381
The COrg ontology is an extension of the ontology of
organizations (ORG) (Reynolds, 2014b)
recommended by the W3C. The ontology ORG has a
reference taxonomy, on which there already exists a
consensus established by the use in different projects
and domains.
The reuse of ontological resources is a good
practice already consolidated by the ontology
engineering community. In this sense, during the last
iteration, the "pruning" of the ontology will be
performed, aiming at the removal of elements
considered irrelevant for the scope of COrg. This
activity aims to make the resulting ontology suitable
for reuse, extension or specialization in other projects
and applications.
4 CONCLUSION AND FUTURE
WORK
The environment of an organization usually involves
several activity domains, some geographic dispersion
and different social actors. It is increasingly
challenging to organize the knowledge necessary for
the healthy and productive development of activities
in different organizational contexts.
However, the scientific literature demonstrates
that corporate ontologies can be very useful for such
purposes. Additionally, the literature also shows that
large ontologies, particularly when involving
multiple domains, can be developed as a network of
ontologies containing different types of ontologies
smaller, simpler, and mainly more suited to more
specific and dynamic requirements. It was also
verified that a network of ontologies it will better
developed through intense collaboration, especially
among general stakeholders, domain experts and
ontology engineers. In this case, the "added value" of
collaboration would be a conceptualization of
consensus, from which new concepts could be
formalized and reused.
Therefore, in our opinion a network of ontologies
in which one intends to contribute to the organization
of corporate knowledge should provide a “beginning
point”, a set of well-founded general conceptual
categories, organized in networks of core ontologies
or ontology patterns. The development of the
ontology has demonstrated that the identification of
the fundamental concepts must be gradual and very
well founded, so that they can effectively be
specialized in different ontologies and preserving the
conceptual reference that is necessary to guarantee
the semantic interoperability of the data. Regarding
the conceptualization aspects for the development of
the ontology, the legal framework was the main
source of conceptual categories, by the fact that being
in force the laws can be considered as social
"consensuses". The analysis of the legislation was
also relevant to ensure the existence of conceptual
categories that covered the entire domain of SINAES.
It is our opinion that in projects developed for
contexts similar to SINAES, the laws are unavoidable
non-ontological resources, particularly at the
beginning of projects.
As future work, we intend to integrate COrg into
the network of ontologies we are developing within
the OntoSINAES project. The project also foresees
the implementation of a Web environment to support
the collaborative development of knowledge
representation models for the SINAES domain.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work has been supported by COMPETE: POCI-
01-0145-FEDER-007043, by FCT – Fundação para a
Ciência e Tecnologia within the Project Scope:
UID/CEC/00319/2013 and by CAPES Foundation,
Ministry of Education of Brazil.
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