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JannaBest wishes,Dear Patrick,The relation between the person and the emotion is a special kind of participation. The emotion is an occurrent, happening within a given temporal range. The participation is special in several ways, one of which is that it is "private": only one person can participate in an emotion in that way. Emotions are a part of the BFO "history" for the person, which is the sum total of all occurrents taking place during a material entity's life.
We could potentially create an MFOEM-specific relation "has_emotion" as a sub-relation of participates-in in RO (RO_0000056) to link a person to an emotion. Would that help?
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Dear all,I have always considered good practice in ontology engineering to avoid the proliferation of relations, because this would produce a lot of new primitives and thus reduce precision and affect interoperability.Given that BFO2 has a well defined relation "participates in" and the domain ontology has equally well-defined classes Person and Emotion, an additional relation "has emotion" would not provide any benefit for modelling.This does not mean that from an application point of view a predicate "has emotion" might be useful. This could be included in a rule likea has emotion b =def. a 'instance of' Person, b 'instance of' Emotion, a 'participates in' b-Stefan