Criteria-first, semantics-later: reproducible structure discovery in image-based sciences
Jan Bumberger

TL;DR
This paper proposes a criteria-first, semantics-later framework for structure discovery in image-based sciences, emphasizing reproducibility and stability over traditional semantics-first methods that rely on domain-specific labels.
Contribution
It introduces a unified, domain-general framework that separates structure extraction from semantic mapping, enabling reproducible analysis across diverse image-based scientific domains.
Findings
Criteria-first components recur when labels do not scale
Structural products can be treated as FAIR, AI-ready digital objects
Framework supports long-term monitoring and digital twins
Abstract
Across the natural and life sciences, images have become a primary measurement modality, yet the dominant analytic paradigm remains semantics-first. Structure is recovered by predicting or enforcing domain-specific labels. This paradigm fails systematically under the conditions that make image-based science most valuable, including open-ended scientific discovery, cross-sensor and cross-site comparability, and long-term monitoring in which domain ontologies and associated label sets drift culturally, institutionally, and ecologically. A deductive inversion is proposed in the form of criteria-first and semantics-later. A unified framework for criteria-first structure discovery is introduced. It separates criterion-defined, semantics-free structure extraction from downstream semantic mapping into domain ontologies or vocabularies and provides a domain-general scaffold for reproducible…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCell Image Analysis Techniques · Biomedical Text Mining and Ontologies · Research Data Management Practices
