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Can Knowledge about Community Resilience be Organized by Means of Ontological Modeling?. Sarah Newell Wojtek Michalowski Davood Astaraky Telfer School of Management Tracey O’Sullivan Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences. University of Ottawa. Outline. Background
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Can Knowledge about Community Resilience be Organized by Means of Ontological Modeling? Sarah Newell Wojtek Michalowski DavoodAstaraky Telfer School of Management Tracey O’Sullivan Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences • University of Ottawa
Outline • Background • Research Hypothesis • Method • Ontology Study Method • Visualizing the Ontology • Expected Results • Conclusions/Implications
Background • Community Resilience: the ability to resist, absorb, and recover from a disturbance.1 • Many different research approaches have led to a lack of agreement about which are the key elements to focus on when developing interventions. 1 – Norris et al, 2008
Research Hypothesis • Systematic representation of the knowledge about community resilience to a disaster will highlight the interdependence of components so their roles can be better understood.
Method • The ontology engineering will: • Provide structure • Organize the elements • Tailor to unique community needs
Ontology • Structured way of representing knowledge • Concepts and the relationships between them • Study design process
Knowledge Extraction Method • Modified from PICO method1 used by Cochrane Review2 • Adapted for our purposes to include • Concepts, Abstraction Level, Properties (CAP Method) 1 - Higgins & Green, 2011 ; 2 - Cochrane Collaboration, 2013
Knowledge Extraction • Review each paragraph individually • Describing content of literature • Community Resilience to a Disaster • Case study or too specific • Describing relationship between concepts
Developing the Ontology of Community Resilience • Identify key concepts/elements • Define each term or concept • Identify shared characteristics to form hierarchy • Identify appropriate superconcepts and subconcepts based on these characteristics • Develop relationships between hierarchies
Conclusions/Implications • This ontology is a way of representing the current knowledge. • Future research can benefit from identifying gaps that exist in the ontology. • Design of interventions can benefit from having knowledge represented in a systematic manner.
Can Knowledge about Community Resilience be Organized by Means of Ontological Modeling? THANK YOU Contact Information: Sarah Newell University of Ottawa snewe094@uottawa.com www.telfer.uOttawa.ca