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Hauptverfasser: Knowles, Paul, Gajderowicz, Bart, Dugas, Keith
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2024
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.19653
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author Knowles, Paul
Gajderowicz, Bart
Dugas, Keith
author_facet Knowles, Paul
Gajderowicz, Bart
Dugas, Keith
contents The Core Data Ontology (CDO) and the Informatics Domain Model represent a transformative approach to computational systems, shifting from traditional node-centric designs to a data-centric paradigm. This paper introduces a framework where data is categorized into four modalities: objects, events, concepts, and actions. This quadrimodal structure enhances data security, semantic interoperability, and scalability across distributed data ecosystems. The CDO offers a comprehensive ontology that supports AI development, role-based access control, and multimodal data management. By focusing on the intrinsic value of data, the Informatics Domain Model redefines system architectures to prioritize data security, provenance, and auditability, addressing vulnerabilities in current models. The paper outlines the methodology for developing the CDO, explores its practical applications in fields such as AI, robotics, and legal compliance, and discusses future directions for scalable, decentralized, and interoperable data ecosystems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_19653
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Data-Centric Design: Introducing An Informatics Domain Model And Core Data Ontology For Computational Systems
Knowles, Paul
Gajderowicz, Bart
Dugas, Keith
Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
The Core Data Ontology (CDO) and the Informatics Domain Model represent a transformative approach to computational systems, shifting from traditional node-centric designs to a data-centric paradigm. This paper introduces a framework where data is categorized into four modalities: objects, events, concepts, and actions. This quadrimodal structure enhances data security, semantic interoperability, and scalability across distributed data ecosystems. The CDO offers a comprehensive ontology that supports AI development, role-based access control, and multimodal data management. By focusing on the intrinsic value of data, the Informatics Domain Model redefines system architectures to prioritize data security, provenance, and auditability, addressing vulnerabilities in current models. The paper outlines the methodology for developing the CDO, explores its practical applications in fields such as AI, robotics, and legal compliance, and discusses future directions for scalable, decentralized, and interoperable data ecosystems.
title Data-Centric Design: Introducing An Informatics Domain Model And Core Data Ontology For Computational Systems
topic Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.19653