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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Medical Informatics

Date Submitted: Apr 19, 2022
Date Accepted: Nov 9, 2022

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

A Linked Open Data–Based Terminology to Describe Libre/Free and Open-source Software: Incremental Development Study

Jahn F, Ammenwerth E, Dornauer V, Höffner K, Bindel M, Karopka T, Winter A

A Linked Open Data–Based Terminology to Describe Libre/Free and Open-source Software: Incremental Development Study

JMIR Med Inform 2023;11:e38861

DOI: 10.2196/38861

PMID: 36662569

PMCID: 9898829

The HITO project: Using Linked Open Data to describe Libre/Free and Open Source Software

  • Franziska Jahn; 
  • Elske Ammenwerth; 
  • Verena Dornauer; 
  • Konrad Höffner; 
  • Michelle Bindel; 
  • Thomas Karopka; 
  • Alfred Winter

ABSTRACT

Background:

There is a variety of Libre/Free and Open Source Software (LIFOSS) products for medicine and healthcare. To support health care and IT professionals in selecting an appropriate software product for given tasks, several comparison studies and web platforms such as MEDFLOSS.org are available. However, due to the lack of a uniform terminology of health informatics, ambiguous or imprecise terms are used to describe functionalities of LIFOSS. This makes comparisons of LIFOSS difficult and may lead to inappropriate software selection decisions. Using Linked Open Data promises to address these challenges.

Objective:

We describe LIFOSS systematically with the help of an underlying health IT ontology (HITO). We publish HITO and HITO-based software product descriptions using Linked Open Data to obtain the following benefits: (1) Linking and reusing existing terminologies, and (2) using semantic web tools for viewing and querying the LIFOSS data in the world wide web.

Methods:

HITO is incrementally developed and implemented. First, classes for the description of software products in health IT evaluation studies were identified. Second, requirements for describing LIFOSS were elicited by interviewing the platform operators of the internet platform medfloss.org. Third, for describing domain-specific functionalities of software products, existing catalogues of features and enterprise functions were analyzed and integrated into the HITO knowledge base. Finally, to validate the resulting ontology and catalogues, HITO was used to describe 25 LIFOSS products.

Results:

HITO provides a defined set of classes and their relationships to describe LIFOSS in medicine and healthcare. With the help of linked or integrated catalogues for languages, programming languages, licenses, features and enterprise functions, the functionalities of LIFOSS can be precisely described and compared. We publish HITO and the LIFOSS descriptions as Linked Open Data, they can therefore be queried and viewed using different semantic web tools such as an RDF browser, SPARQL queries and faceted search. The advantages of providing HITO as linked open data are demonstrated by practical examples.

Conclusions:

HITO supports unambiguous communication among health IT professionals and researchers. Providing LIFOSS product information as linked open data enables barrier-free and easy access to data which is often hidden in user manuals of software products or even not available at all. Efforts of establishing a unique terminology of medical and health informatics should be further supported and continued.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Jahn F, Ammenwerth E, Dornauer V, Höffner K, Bindel M, Karopka T, Winter A

A Linked Open Data–Based Terminology to Describe Libre/Free and Open-source Software: Incremental Development Study

JMIR Med Inform 2023;11:e38861

DOI: 10.2196/38861

PMID: 36662569

PMCID: 9898829

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