IPTC Releases Comprehensive Controlled Vocabularies for SportsML 3.0 Standard

Author
SySAdmin
Posted
November 17, 2016
Views
941

Page All:

Page 1
IPTC Releases Comprehensive Controlled Vocabularies for SportsML 3.0 Standard

LONDON, November 17, 2016 /PRNewswire/ --

    The IPTC [https://iptc.org ] has released a comprehensive set of sports controlled
vocabularies as a supplement to the SportsML 3.0 [https://iptc.org/standards/sportsml-g2 ]
sports-data interchange format, which was released in July 2016. These controlled
vocabularies (CVs) are in the format of NewsML-G2 NewsML-G2 Knowledge Items
[http://dev.iptc.org/NewsCodes-G2-Knowledge-Items-by-IPTC ] plus RDF variants and are
available on IPTC's CV server at http://cv.iptc.org/newscodes.

    There are 113 CVs representing such core sports concerns such as event and player
status, as well as specialized lists for 11 sports (basketball, soccer, rugby, American
football, etc.) for statistics, player positions, scoring types, etc.

    "The SportsML 3.0 standard's semantic tech capabilities are improved greatly by the
new controlled vocabularies," said Trond Husø, system developer for Norwegian news agency
NTB, one of the early adopters of SportsML 3.0. "Data can be easily imported, structured,
and stored."

    "When building a sports app you spend a lot of prep time defining your terms and
building a schema," said Paul Kelly, news technology consultant and lead for IPTC's Sports
Content Working Group. "By using SportsML 3.0, there is no need to reinvent the wheel."

    "You consider things such as 'What sort of results and stats do we need?' and 'How
will our system handle interrupted matches?' IPTC's vocabularies can get you on your way
because they properly define in a standard format almost all the terminology you would use
in a sports application: Everything from "goals-scored" to a full enumeration of status
codes for sports events," Kelly said.

    For the Summer 2016 Olympics, NTB acquired the rights to distribute the results and
data from the International Olympics Committee's Olympic Data Feed (ODF).  NTB then
transformed ODF to SportsML 3.0, and then to NITF3.2. "Using SportsML to structure the
ODF's data is a broad and comprehensive solution to approaching all sports and
competitions worldwide," said Husø, who is also a member of IPTC's Sports Content Working
Group. "SportsML is now a truly flexible and universal format that can incorporate
multiple vendor codes and still provide a defense against vendor lock-in."

    "Terms defined in another format such as ODF can easily live beside SportsML terms -
as well as any other proprietary format - so that an organisation can build a repository
of knowledge of all the different sports-data formats," Kelly said.

    Another advantage to the new SportsML 3.0 standard is that if new concepts are added
to a sports vocabulary or modified in it, the data model and the XML Schema don't change;
they stay stable. It also supports all languages for the concept labels.

    "Another great feature is that we can translate the definitions to Norwegian - without
changing or breaking the vocabulary," said Husø. "If we were to distribute internationally,
our domestic receivers could look up the definitions in Norwegian, while the
international ones could use the English term."

    IPTC's SportsML 3.0 standard underwent a major upgrade from version 2.2, after 12
years of evolution since its first version. The new standard incorporates contribution
from sports experts in 12 countries. Its flexible core covers all major sports and events
in most news reporting.

    Other early adopters of SportsML 3.0 include Univision and the British Press
Association in its new multi-sport API. Its major features include:

    -       compliance with IPTC's NewsML-G2 standard
-       a flexible core that covers all major sports and events in most news reporting
-       plugins for detailed stats in 10+ sports
-       a more flexible tournament model
-       schedules, scores, standing, statistics, etc.
-       choices between specific and generic terms
-       controlled vocabularies, semantic tech capabilities
-       schema redesign
-       many samples and tool support.

    Tool support for SportsML 3.0 includes 45 samples from 11 different sports and events,
including both classic and SportsML-G2 examples, and both generic and specific examples.

    The vocabularies will be maintained by IPTC for future expansion; new sports and terms
can be added.

    For more information on SportsML 3.0:
SportsML 3.0 Standard, [https://iptc.org/standards/sportsml-g2 ] including Zip package
SportsML 3.0 Specification Documents [http://dev.iptc.org/SportsML ]
NewsML-G2 Standard [https://iptc.org/standards/newsml-g2 ]
Contact: Trond Husø @trondhuso [https://twitter.com/trondhuso ], Trond.Huso@ntb.no

    About IPTC: 

    The IPTC, based in London, brings together the world's leading news agencies,
publishers and industry vendors. It develops and promotes efficient technical standards to
improve the management and exchange of information between content providers,
intermediaries and consumers. The standards enable easy, cost-effective and rapid
innovation and include the Photo Metadata standard, the news exchange formats NewsML-G2,
SportsML-G2 and NITF, rNews for marking up online news, the rights expression language
RightsML, and NewsCodes taxonomies for categorizing news. Visit the web site
http://www.iptc.org or follow @IPTC on Twitter.

       
         
        Media contact: 
        Michael Steidl, IPTC Managing director 
        Phone: +44-(20)-3178-4922 
        fax: +44-(20)-7664-7878 
        email: office@iptc.org  
        web: http://www.iptc.org  

        25 Southampton Buildings 
        London WC2A 1AL 
        United Kingdom 

     

IPTC

Title

Medium Image View Large