Replies: 5 comments 3 replies
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closely related to fuzziness is also usability: You might have a long form asking for a lot of details --- but no one will use this. also related is uncertainty/disorder: experimental (crystal) structures are often "disordered". On the one hand you will always have an ensemble of different structures (+impurities) in your sample and, on the other hand, XRD can often not resolve the position of all atoms. For latter there is somewhat of a standard in CIF, however for the former it is not really clear. |
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I have another topic that is maybe partially unrelated to the discussions above, but I think still fits in this discussion topic (and partially mentioned above "What are the basic abstractions to characterize an experimental sample?").
Here are the questions I have:
That is to say:
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ulrich from chat:
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IMHO chemistry at least is far too fuzzy for any "cathedral" model. We are, to a degree, pushed towards a decentralized model of coexisting standards, hopefully interoperable through painless parsing. Every micro-community will have a particular ontology and a way to define their connections in the form of metadata, which will not be transferable to closely related communities (i.e. is enantioselectivity a reaction property or a product/compound property? depends on who you ask). |
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In CML we had the following "objects":
* molecule. This was an abstraction and could cover connection tables (an
abstraction),
" formula". formulae of various sorts, not necessarily integral. They can
contain free variables (x, y, etc.). (Many CML objects can have free
variables - it's very powerful, and the free variables can have ranges and
other constraints).
* crystal. An idealised 2- or 3-D lattice, usually infinite but could be
limited
* substance. This represents the real world and covers mixtures, samples,
batches, etc. It accepts the fuzziness which is described by annotation.
* transform3 and transform2 (allows any object with coordinates to be
replicated in different positions).
…On Tue, Feb 8, 2022 at 9:19 AM Rubén Laplaza ***@***.***> wrote:
IMHO chemistry at least is far too fuzzy for any "cathedral" model. We
are, to a degree, pushed towards a decentralized model of coexisting
standards, hopefully interoperable through painless parsing. Every
micro-community will have a particular ontology and a way to define their
connections in the form of metadata, which will not be transferable to
closely related communities (i.e. is enantioselectivity a reaction property
or a product/compound property? depends on who you ask).
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This thread is for discussing, finalizing and organizing a breakout with the theme in the title above.
Link to current description
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