Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

change labels for "disease" and "disorder" #176

Open
cmungall opened this issue Feb 24, 2023 · 26 comments
Open

change labels for "disease" and "disorder" #176

cmungall opened this issue Feb 24, 2023 · 26 comments

Comments

@cmungall
Copy link

OGMS takes two strings that are part of non-ontological discourse that have complicated but often interchangeable usage and imposes ontological commitments on them. This leads to a lot of confusion.

Names are important. I recommend changing to "pathological organism disposition" and "pathological material entity" or something like that.

@wdduncan
Copy link

The use of the labels disease and disorder have resulted in much controversy in the OBO Foundry. I support this change, but others need to weigh in.

@scheuerm
Copy link
Contributor

I tend to put much more emphasis on definitions than labels. Certainly the labels proposed by @cmungall are consistent with the definitions. But it would also seem odd for an ontology of general medical science to not have disease and disorder terms.

@zhengj2007
Copy link
Contributor

The labels proposed by @cmungall look good to me. However, 'disease' and 'disorder' are commonly used terms in the biomedical areas. Do have any plan to add the 'disease' and 'disorder' as synonyms of "pathological organism disposition" and "pathological material entity"? not necessary exact synonym, might be narrow/broad/related synonym

@addiehl
Copy link

addiehl commented Feb 27, 2023

I think if we change the labels, we definitely need to retain the previous labels as some type of synonym.

@wdduncan
Copy link

wdduncan commented Mar 1, 2023

I agree with @scheuerm that OGMS not having the terms 'disease' or 'disorder' is a bit odd. But, IMHO, the benefits outweigh the cost. For example, see the debate in COB about this. We can (of course) add synonyms for whichever labels we choose.

However, if OGMS is going to change its labels, MONDO and DO (and others) should change its labels in order to hopefully avoid confusion across Foundry. I've submitted an issue for this on the MONDO tracker.

@sivaramarabandi
Copy link

sivaramarabandi commented Mar 1, 2023 via email

@linikujp
Copy link

linikujp commented Mar 2, 2023 via email

@alanruttenberg
Copy link
Contributor

I support the change, with the old labels being added as alternative terms, and other labels as alternative terms, as desired.

@linikujp
Copy link

linikujp commented Mar 6, 2023

To summary, this is my suggestion:

  1. change "disorder" to "pathologically disordered material entity" and keep "disorder" as alternative terms with detailed explanation of the change.
  2. keep "disease" and add "disease or disorder" as alternative term, and add explanation as well.
    Do you agree with above, Alan?

@alanruttenberg
Copy link
Contributor

@linikujp I'm not thrilled with the "disease or disorder" as an alternative label, but wouldn't oppose it, push come to shove. The reason is that we don't generally recommend disjunctive classes in ontologies, and the label suggests that. But it's only a label and as @wdduncan says, it's the definition that matters more.

I think there's objection to keeping disease as the primary label, so I'm more inclined to support @cmungall's suggestion for pathological organism disposition, or something similar, with disease as an alternative label. Disease as an alternative label for disorder also seems appropriate, given what we've been told about usage in the wild.

@linikujp
Copy link

linikujp commented Mar 6, 2023

"pathological organism disposition" will then become a term that is not going to be easily understood by non-BFO people, although I think it is maybe a broader term than disease, can a symptom become a "pathological organism disposition"?

@alanruttenberg
Copy link
Contributor

Schulz uses "pathological disposition", which is shorter. Symptom is another of those words that's used in several senses. For example, the usage "symptom: runny nose" could mean the disposition to have a runny nose, or a type of realization of the disposition. It's also used in the disorder sense, as in "symptom: rash", which could also mean a tendency to develop rashes, i.e. part of disease course in which a rash disorder is created. Language is not the ontologist's friend in this domain.

@alanruttenberg
Copy link
Contributor

@linikujp Also, regarding not being understood, as with all labels we need to be training ontology users to read the definition to understand the term. Applications should be designed to make the definition hard to avoid. Also, there's no suggestion that the term "disease course" be changed, and there ought to be an axiom on disease/pathological disposition: realized in only (part of some disease course). Maybe that would help.

@alanruttenberg
Copy link
Contributor

Maybe I'm mistaken. There is the suggestion of "pathological process", though I don't think that means the same thing as disease course, as the latter is the "The totality of all processes through which a given disease instance is realized." whereas I think a pathological process would be a part of that. But maybe the axiom would be realized in only pathological process. But then "pathological process" is currently defined as "A bodily process that is clinically abnormal.", and such things are not only realizations of dispositions, but also processes associated with injuries. It looks like changing the labels won't be a surgical change but will require rewording of other definitions and possibly adding new classes.

@linikujp
Copy link

linikujp commented Mar 6, 2023

I agree that both human and machine need to understand the definitions. But only hope that trained ontology users to read the definition won't be a way for ontology to go far. I think the labels need to be somehow touching the reality and intuitive, not everyone is Aristotle.
As you mentioned @alanruttenberg and @zhengj2007 also mentioned, if labels is being changed, the definitions and axioms need to be changed and make it work.
Symptom and sign are difficult to deal with ... I think end users want to use "running nose" and relate it to things it is supposed to relate to. Perhaps we could put them all as "pathological disposition", and the disease ontology, symptom ontology can use the term as their upper term. COB can then set up some relations such as characteristics to relate a disease with symptoms. Would that be a possible path?

@addiehl
Copy link

addiehl commented Mar 6, 2023

While I agree that changing 'disorder' to 'pathologically disordered material entity' or 'pathological material entity' is an improvement useful to disambiguate the label and add face value, I am not sure that changing 'disease' to 'pathological organism disposition' or 'pathological disposition' helps much, and might rather confuse users, who would see familiar disease names as subclasses. We could simply call it 'disease disposition' to retain the face value of the word disease.

@alanruttenberg
Copy link
Contributor

@addiehl I like that idea.

@linikujp
Copy link

linikujp commented Mar 7, 2023

Support the "disease disposition" idea too! Keeping the "disorder" and "disease" in the changed label proposal will be much more end user friendly than creating something that is totally alien to them.

@wdduncan
Copy link

wdduncan commented Mar 7, 2023

Thanks for the suggest @addiehl! In the context of OGMS, I like the label disease disposition better than pathological disposition too.

@cmungall
Copy link
Author

cmungall commented Mar 7, 2023 via email

@hoganwr
Copy link

hoganwr commented Mar 7, 2023

Do we have a definition or elucidation of 'pathological'?

In the context of OGMS, 'clinically abnormal' was the phrase, not 'pathological'

From the paper:

'Disorder' =def. – "A causally relatively isolated combination of physical components that is (a) clinically abnormal and (b) maximal, in the sense that it is not a part of some larger such combination."

'Pathological Process' =def. – "A bodily process that is a manifestation of a disorder."

"When we say that some bodily feature of an organism is clinically abnormal, this signifies that it: (1) is not part of the life plan for an organism of the relevant type (unlike aging or pregnancy), (2) is causally linked to an elevated risk either of pain or other feelings of illness, or of death or dysfunction, and (3) is such that the elevated risk exceeds a certain threshold level"

Although it would smack of circularity, could add synomyms to disorder of "clinically abnormal body part" and "clinically abnormal anatomical entity".

@linikujp
Copy link

linikujp commented Mar 7, 2023

@cmungall it is better to add disposition to disease, so that it is friendly and clear to the end user - who are unfamiliar with the BFO approach. Although we want them to read the definition, a lot of them still have their mental definition when they read labels.

Support @hoganwr's point on elucidation of "pathological".

@addiehl
Copy link

addiehl commented Mar 8, 2023

@cmungall Keep in mind that 'pathological material entity' does not match usage in the medical literature either as far as I know. We are in the process of making some compromises in regards to labels to use in OGMS and possibly other ontologies. I am not completely thrilled by 'disease disposition' in part for the reason you suggest, but the label does at least include the word disease and imply that it is a type of disposition, which is not wrong.

@cmungall
Copy link
Author

cmungall commented Mar 8, 2023 via email

@scheuerm
Copy link
Contributor

@alanruttenberg I don't agree that "For example, the usage "symptom: runny nose" could mean the disposition to have a runny nose, or a type of realization of the disposition." A runny nose is a realization.

@scheuerm
Copy link
Contributor

It seems like we are approaching a consensus on this. So the proposal would be to:

  • Change OGMS:disorder => OGMS:pathologically disordered material entity, with disorder as a synonym and =def. – "A causally relatively isolated combination of physical components that is (a) clinically abnormal and (b) maximal, in the sense that it is not a part of some larger such combination."
  • Change OGMS:disease => OGMS:disease disposition, with synonym disease (but not disorder) and =def. - "A disposition (i) to undergo pathological processes that (ii) exists in an organism because of one or more disorders in that organism."
  • Add OGMS: disease predisposition with =def. something like "a disposition to form a pathologically disordered material entity" and perhaps "disorder predisposition" as a synonym.
  • Define OGMS:pathological that is consistent with the clinically abnormal elucidation

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

9 participants