Open Provenance Model
Introduction
Thirteen teams responded to the second Provenance challenge. Discussions at the Monterey Workshop indicated that there was substantial agreement on a core representation of provenance. As a result, a small working group met, crafted and iterated a data model, which is available from
opm v1.00. Following
the first OPM Workshop, a revision of the model was produced
opm v1.01. This revision was used as the basis for a
ThirdProvenanceChallenge. After this challenge, a mechanism for updating
OPM was agreed upon and is now ongoing (see below).
The starting point of this work is the community agreement summarized by Simon Miles (see
SecondWorkshopMinutes). We assume that provenance of objects (whether digital or not) is represented by an annotated causality graph, which is a directed acyclic graph, enriched with annotations capturing further information pertaining to execution. For the purpose of this work, a provenance graph is defined to be
a record of a past execution.
Inter-Operability Vision
Our aim is to define a data format and associated semantics by which provenance systems can interchange provenance information. Ultimately, this model may also be used to express provenance queries and to record provenance information.
OPM Community Process for Updates
OPM is updated through a light weight community process. You can find discussions about the next revision of
OPM and extensions to it at the
OPM Wiki.
OPM Bindings
The page
OpenProvenanceModelBindings provides a list of
OPM bindings to various technologies (XML, RDF) and libraries for working with
OPM.
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LucMoreau - 18 Dec 2007
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PaulGroth - 31 Jul 2008
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PaulGroth - 30 Jul 2009
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