Reasoning over Taxonomic Change: Exploring Alignments for the Perelleschus Use Case
Nico M. Franz, Mingmin Chen, Shizhuo Yu, Parisa Kianmajd, Shawn, Bowers, Bertram Ludaescher

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel logic-based approach for aligning and comparing multiple taxonomies over time, enhancing consistency and informativeness in tracking taxonomic changes and perspectives.
Contribution
It introduces a new interactive reasoning method that improves the alignment of taxonomic concepts across different classifications using logic and expert input.
Findings
The reasoning approach increased information content by an order of magnitude.
It effectively visualizes congruences and differences among taxonomies.
The method is scalable for complex taxonomic datasets.
Abstract
Classifications and phylogenetic inferences of organismal groups change in light of new insights. Over time these changes can result in an imperfect tracking of taxonomic perspectives through the re-/use of Code-compliant or informal names. To mitigate these limitations, we introduce a novel approach for aligning taxonomies through the interaction of human experts and logic reasoners. We explore the performance of this approach with the Perelleschus use case of Franz & Cardona-Duque (2013). The use case includes six taxonomies published from 1936 to 2013, 54 taxonomic concepts (i.e., circumscriptions of names individuated according to their respective source publications), and 75 expert-asserted Region Connection Calculus articulations (e.g., congruence, proper inclusion, overlap, or exclusion). An Open Source reasoning toolkit is used to analyze 13 paired Perelleschus taxonomy…
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