AGROVOC


AGROVOC is a multilingual controlled vocabulary covering all areas of interest to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, including food, nutrition, agriculture, fisheries, forestry and the environment. The vocabulary consists of over 35,000 concepts with up to 671,000 terms in different languages. It is a collaborative effort, edited by a community of experts and coordinated by FAO.
AGROVOC is made available by FAO as an RDF/SKOS-XL concept scheme and published as a linked data set aligned to 18 other vocabularies.

History

AGROVOC was first published at the beginning of the 1980s by FAO in English, Spanish and French to serve as a controlled vocabulary to index publications in agricultural science and technology, especially for AGRIS.
In the 1990s, AGROVOC abandoned paper printing and went digital with data storage handled by a relational database. In 2004, preliminary experiments with expressing AGROVOC into the Web Ontology Language took place. At the same time a web based editing tool was developed, then called WorkBench, nowadays VocBench. In 2009 AGROVOC became an SKOS resource.
Today, AGROVOC is available in as an concept scheme and published as a set aligned to 18 other data sets related to agriculture.

Users

AGROVOC is used by researchers, librarians and information managers for indexing, retrieving and organizing data in agricultural information systems and web pages. Within the context of the Semantic Web also new users are emerging, like software developers and ontology builders.

Access

AGROVOC is accessible in various ways:
The AGROVOC team, located at FAO, coordinates the editorial activities related to the maintenance of AGROVOC. The actual maintenance is carried out by a community of editors and institutions for each of the language versions.
The tool used by the community to edit and maintain AGROVOC is , which was designed to meet the needs of the Semantic Web and linked data environments. VocBench provides tools and functionalities that facilitate both collaborative editing and multilingual terminology. It also includes administration and group management features that permit flexible roles for maintenance, validation and quality assurance.
FAO also facilitates the technical maintenance of AGROVOC, including its publication as a . Technical support and infrastructure is provided by the University of Tor Vergata which leads the technical development of VocBench.

Structure

All 35,000+ concepts of the AGROVOC thesaurus are hierarchically organized under 25 top concepts. AGROVOC top concepts are very general and high level concepts, like “activities”, “organisms”, “location”, “products” etc. More than half of the total number of concepts fall under the top concept “organism”, which confirms how AGROVOC is largely oriented towards the agricultural sector.
AGROVOC is an RDF/SKOS-XL concept scheme, meaning the conceptual and terminological level are separated. The basic notions for such a concept scheme are: concepts, their labels and relations.
Concepts are anything we want to represent or “talk about” in our domain. Concepts are represented by terms. A concept could also be considered as the set of all terms used to express it in various languages.
In SKOS, concepts are formalized as skos:Concept, identified by dereferenceable URIs. For example, the AGROVOC concept with URI http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_12332 is for maize.
Terms are the actual terms used to name a concept. For example maize, maïs, 玉米, ข้าวโพด are all terms used to refer to the same concept in English, French, Chinese and Hindi respectively.
AGROVOC terms are expressed by means of the SKOS extension for labels, SKOS-XL. The predicates used are:
skosxl:prefLabel, used for preferred terms, and
skosxl:altLabel, used for non- preferred terms.
In SKOS, hierarchical relations between concepts are expressed by the predicates skos:broader, skos:narrower. They correspond to the classical thesaurus relations broader/narrower.
Non-hierarchical relations express a notion of “relatedness” between concepts. AGROVOC uses the SKOS relation skos:related, and a specific vocabulary of relations called Agrontology.
AGROVOC also allows for relations between labels, thanks to the SKOS-XL extension to SKOS.

Linked data

AGROVOC is available as a linked data set and is aligned with 18 vocabularies related to agriculture. The linked data version of AGROVOC is exposed as RDF and HTML, through a content-negotiation mechanism. It is also exposed through a SPARQL endpoint.
The advantage of having a thesaurus like AGROVOC published as LOD is that once thesauri are linked, the resources they index are linked as well. A good example is AGRIS, a mash-up web application that links the AGRIS bibliographic repository to related web resources.
ResourceTopicsLinked conceptsLanguagesLinked dataType of link
ASFAFisheries1784skos:closeMatch
Chinese Agriculture Thesaurus AgricultureYesskos:closeMatch
EARThEnvironment1363EN+Yesskos:closeMatch
EUROVOCGeneral EU1,297EN, ES, FR + 21 moreYesskos:exactMatch
GEMETEnvironment1,191EN, ES, FR + 30 moreYesskos:exactMatch
Library of Congress Subject Headings General1,093ENYesskos:exactMatch
NAL ThesaurusAgriculture13,390EN, ESYesskos:exactMatch
RAMEAU Répertoire d'autorité-matière encyclopédique et alphabétique unifiéGeneral686FRYesskos:exactMatch
STW - Thesaurus for EconomicsEconomy1,136EN, DEYesskos:exactMatch
TheSoz - Thesaurus for the Social SciencesSocial sciences846EN, DEYesskos:exactMatch
Geopolical OntologyGeopolitical entities253AR, CH, EN, ES, FR, RUYesskos:exactMatch
Dewey Decimal Classification General409EN, ES, FR + 8 moreYesskos:exactMatch
DBpediaGeneral10,989EN, ES, FR + 8 moreYesskos:exactMatch
skos:closeMatch
SWD General6,245DEYesskos:exactMatch
skos:closeMatch
skos:broadMatch
skos:narrowMatch
GeoNamesGeographical entities212EN, ES, FR + 63 moreYesskos:exactMatch

Copyright and license

Copyright for AGROVOC content in FAO languages - English, French, Spanish, Arabic, Russian and Chinese - is with FAO, while content in other languages rests with the institutions that authored it. AGROVOC thesaurus content in English, Russian, French, Spanish, Arabic and Chinese is licensed under the international Creative Commons Attribution License. If you need further assistance or have any related questions, please contact copyright@fao.org.

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