Preferred Name |
person |
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Synonyms |
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|
Definitions |
A specific physical (natural) person (probably anonymous but possessing unique identity) with certain attributes on which the Sessions are recorded (from which the data is observed: Record). A Subject interacts with a Context through her Actions. "Subject" comes from the common terminology used in BCI experiments when referring to a specific person. This concept is based on the notion of Electronic Patient/Medical Record, such as the HL7 Record. Information objects related to this concept (namely SubjectState), capture the description of the Medical and Physiological "Condition" of a Subject in a Session. Thus, a Subject may have multiple Descriptors associated with it, such as HL7 Records or specific XML vocabularies from the industry. This ontology does not define any specific set of attributes associated to a Subject. BCI applications can extend this concept according to their information needs and system requirements. |
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ID |
https://w3id.org/BCI-ontology#Subject |
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change note |
Status: *STABLE* |
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definition |
A specific physical (natural) person (probably anonymous but possessing unique identity) with certain attributes on which the Sessions are recorded (from which the data is observed: Record). A Subject interacts with a Context through her Actions. "Subject" comes from the common terminology used in BCI experiments when referring to a specific person. This concept is based on the notion of Electronic Patient/Medical Record, such as the HL7 Record. Information objects related to this concept (namely SubjectState), capture the description of the Medical and Physiological "Condition" of a Subject in a Session. Thus, a Subject may have multiple Descriptors associated with it, such as HL7 Records or specific XML vocabularies from the industry. This ontology does not define any specific set of attributes associated to a Subject. BCI applications can extend this concept according to their information needs and system requirements. |
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describedby | ||
editorial note |
The subject is the point of reference (focus) of the data monitoring and data analysis, from which BCI applications collect Measurement Recordings. Hence, the name Subject instead of Person. |
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example |
[ESS] and [XDF] define some useful data type properties (attributes) associated to a Subject. Some examples of these attributes are: (*) Gender: (*) Defined as an enumerated value = { Female, Male, ... }. (*) It can be derived as a subproperty extended from the (dbp:Person).sex property definition. (*) Year of birth (YOB): (*) Defined as a positive integer greater or equal than 1900. (*) It can be derived as a subproperty extended from the dbp:Person definition. (*) Handedness: (*) Defined as an enumerated value = { Ambidextrous, Left, N/A, Right }. (*) Subject's dominantly used hand. Related to medical record. (*) Hearing: (*) Defined as an enumerated value = { CorrectedToNormal, Impaired, Normal }. (*) Subject's hearing condition. Related to medical record. (*) Vision: (*) Defined as an enumerated value = { CorrectedToNormal, Impaired, Normal }. (*) Subject's vision condition. Related to medical record. |
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isDefinedBy | ||
modified |
2018-06-05T23:49:00 |
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part |
Subject |
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preferred label |
person |
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prefixIRI |
bci:Subject |
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source |
[ESS], [XDF] |
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StillImage |
Subject.png Context.png |
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title |
Subject |
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subClassOf |
http://dbpedia.org/ontology/Person http://www.ontologydesignpatterns.org/ont/dul/DUL.owl#NaturalPerson |