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Formal Ontology in Information Systems (1998)

by N GUARINO
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Advertising as Information

by José C. Nelson, Manuel Galán, Antonio Ocón, Enrique Rubio - Journal of Political Economy , 1974
"... for a R+D+I Centre to organize, retrieve and share ..."
Abstract - Cited by 499 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
for a R+D+I Centre to organize, retrieve and share
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... ways of categorizing them. In the design, the ontologies for a R+D+i Centre we have used the classification of ontologies according to their level of dependence on a particular task or point of view =-=[4]-=- Fig.6: Classification of ontologies Here we define the ontologies more relevant in our R+D+i Centre. Top-level ontologies describe very general concepts and provide general notions under which all ro...

Determining Semantic Similarity among Entity Classes from Different Ontologies

by M. Andrea Rodríguez, Max J. Egenhofer - IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON KNOWLEDGE AND DATA ENGINEERING , 2003
"... Semantic similarity measures play an important role in information retrieval and information integration. Traditional approaches to modeling semantic similarity compute the semantic distance between definitions within a single ontology. This single ontology is either a domain-independent ontology or ..."
Abstract - Cited by 200 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
Semantic similarity measures play an important role in information retrieval and information integration. Traditional approaches to modeling semantic similarity compute the semantic distance between definitions within a single ontology. This single ontology is either a domain-independent ontology or the result of the integration of existing ontologies. We present an approach to computing semantic similarity that relaxes the requirement of a single ontology and accounts for differences in the levels of explicitness and formalization of the different ontology specifications. A similarity function determines similar entity classes by using a matching process over synonym sets, semantic neighborhoods, and distinguishing features that are classified into parts, functions, and attributes. Experimental results with different ontologies indicate that the model gives good results when ontologies have complete and detailed representations of entity classes. While the combination of word matching and semantic neighborhood matching is adequate for detecting equivalent entity classes, feature matching allows us to discriminate among similar, but not necessarily equivalent, entity classes.

Supporting Ontological Analysis of Taxonomic Relationships

by Christopher Welty, Nicola Guarino , 2001
"... Taxonomies are an important part of conceptual modeling. They provide substantial structural information, and are typically the key elements in integration efforts, however there has been little guidance as to what makes a proper taxonomy. We have adopted several notions from the philosophical pract ..."
Abstract - Cited by 189 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
Taxonomies are an important part of conceptual modeling. They provide substantial structural information, and are typically the key elements in integration efforts, however there has been little guidance as to what makes a proper taxonomy. We have adopted several notions from the philosophical practice of formal ontology, and adapted them for use in information systems. These tools, identity, essence, unity, and dependence, provide a solid logical framework within which the properties that form a taxonomy can be analyzed. This analysis helps make intended meaning more explicit, improving human understanding and reducing the cost of integration.

Ontology-Driven Geographic Information Systems

by Frederico T. Fonseca, Max J. Egenhofer , 1999
"... This paper introduces a geographic information system architecture based on ontologies. Ontology plays a central role in the definition of all aspects and components of an information system in the so-called ontology-driven information systems. The system presented here uses a container of interoper ..."
Abstract - Cited by 175 (23 self) - Add to MetaCart
This paper introduces a geographic information system architecture based on ontologies. Ontology plays a central role in the definition of all aspects and components of an information system in the so-called ontology-driven information systems. The system presented here uses a container of interoperable geographic objects. The objects are extracted from multiple independent data sources and are derived from a strongly typed mapping of classes from multiple ontologies. This approach provides a great level of interoperability and allows partial integration of information when completeness is impossible.

Semantic E-Workflow Composition

by Jorge Cardoso, Amit Sheth - Journal of Intelligent Information Systems , 2003
"... Systems and infrastructures are currently being developed to support Web services. The main idea is to encapsulate an organization’s functionality within an appropriate interface and advertise it as Web services. While in some cases Web services may be utilized in an isolated form, it is normal to e ..."
Abstract - Cited by 171 (28 self) - Add to MetaCart
Systems and infrastructures are currently being developed to support Web services. The main idea is to encapsulate an organization’s functionality within an appropriate interface and advertise it as Web services. While in some cases Web services may be utilized in an isolated form, it is normal to expect Web services to be integrated as part of workflow processes. The composition of workflow processes that model e-service applications differs from the design of traditional workflows, in terms of the number of tasks (Web services) available to the composition process, in their heterogeneity, and in their autonomy. Therefore, two problems need to be solved: how to efficiently discover Web services – based on functional and operational requirements – and how to facilitate the interoperability of heterogeneous Web services. In this paper, we present a solution within the context of the emerging Semantic Web, that includes use of ontologies to overcome some of the problems. We start by illustrating the steps involved in the composition of a workflow. Two of these steps are the discovery of Web services and their posterior integration into a workflow. To assist designers with those two steps, we have devised an algorithm to simultaneously discover Web services and resolve heterogeneity among their interfaces and the workflow host. Finally, we describe a prototype that has been implemented to illustrate how discovery and interoperability functions are achieved.
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..., database design, information modeling, information integration, objectoriented analysis, information retrieval and extraction, knowledge management and organization, and agent-based systems design (=-=Guarino 1998). O-=-ntologies are introduced as an “explicit specification of a conceptualization” (Gruber 1993). The use of ontologies for the explication of knowledge is a possible approach to overcome the problem ...

A .The business model ontology- A proposition in a design science approach [D], Université de Lausanne ,

by Osterwalder - Mahadevan.B.A. framework for business model innovation[R].IMRC 2004 Conference, , 2004
"... ..."
Abstract - Cited by 147 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
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Some Ontological Principles for Designing Upper Level Lexical Resources

by Nicola Guarino , 1998
"... The purpose of this paper is to explore some semantic problems related to the use of linguistic ontologies in information systems, and to suggest some organizing principles aimed t o solve such problems. The taxonomic structure of current ontologies is unfortunately quite complicated and hard to und ..."
Abstract - Cited by 132 (5 self) - Add to MetaCart
The purpose of this paper is to explore some semantic problems related to the use of linguistic ontologies in information systems, and to suggest some organizing principles aimed t o solve such problems. The taxonomic structure of current ontologies is unfortunately quite complicated and hard to understand, especially for what concerns the upper levels. I will focus here on the problem of ISA overloading, which I believe is the main responsible of these difficulties. To this purpose, I will carefully analyze the ontological nature of the categories used in current upper-level structures, considering the necessity of splitting them according to more subtle distinctions or the opportunity of excluding them because of their limited organizational role.
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...ose of this paper is to explore some semantic problems related to the use of linguistic ontologies in information systems, and to suggest some organizing principles aimed to solve such problems. See (=-=Guarino, 1998-=-) for a general overview of the role of ontologies in information systems, and for the proposal of ontology-driven information systems. See also (Uschold & Gruninger, 1996; Fridman Noy & Hafner, 1997)...

Understanding the Semantic Web through Descriptions and Situations

by Aldo Gangemi, Peter Mika - Proceedings of ODBASE03 Conference , 2003
"... Abstract. The Semantic Web is a powerful vision that is getting to grips with the challenge of providing more human-oriented web services. Hence, reasoning with and across distributed, partially implicit assumptions (contextual knowledge), is a milestone. Ontologies are a primary means to deploy the ..."
Abstract - Cited by 129 (18 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract. The Semantic Web is a powerful vision that is getting to grips with the challenge of providing more human-oriented web services. Hence, reasoning with and across distributed, partially implicit assumptions (contextual knowledge), is a milestone. Ontologies are a primary means to deploy the Semantic Web vision, but few work has been done on them to manage the context-dependency of Web knowledge. In this paper we introduce an ontology for representing a variety of reified contexts and states of affairs, called D&S, currently implemented as a plug-in to the DOLCE foundational ontology, and its application to two cases: an ontology for communication situations and roles, and an ontology for peer-to-peer communication. The reified contexts represented in D&S have a rich structure, and are a middleware between full-fledged formal contexts and theories, and the often poor vocabularies implemented in Web ontologies... 1
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...vocabularies implemented in Web ontologies. . . 1 Introduction Ontologies, as discussed in Artificial Intelligence, are formal, partial specifications of an agreement over the description of a domain =-=[1]-=-. Ontology-based communication and the integration of passive knowledge sources, dynamic agents and services on a global scale is also known as the vision of the Semantic Web. However, the difficulty ...

Ontological Semantics

by Sergei Nirenburg, Victor Raskin , 2004
"... This book introduces ontological semantics, a comprehensive approach to the treatment of text meaning by computer. Ontological semantics is an integrated complex of theories, methodologies, descriptions and implementations. In ontological semantics, a theory is viewed as a set of statements determin ..."
Abstract - Cited by 128 (38 self) - Add to MetaCart
This book introduces ontological semantics, a comprehensive approach to the treatment of text meaning by computer. Ontological semantics is an integrated complex of theories, methodologies, descriptions and implementations. In ontological semantics, a theory is viewed as a set of statements determining the format of descriptions of the phenomena with which the theory deals. A theory is associated with a methodology used to obtain the descriptions. Implementations are computer systems that use the descriptions to solve specific problems in text processing. Implementations of ontological semantics are combined with other processing systems to produce applications, such as information extraction or machine translation. The theory of ontological semantics is built as a society of microtheories covering such diverse ground as specific language phenomena, world knowledge organization, processing heuristics and issues relating to knowledge representation and implementation system architecture. The theory briefly sketched above is a top-level microtheory, the ontological semantics theory per se. Descriptions in ontological semantics include text meaning representations, lexical entries, ontological concepts and instances as well as procedures for manipulating texts and their meanings. Methodologies in ontological semantics are sets of techniques and instructions for acquiring and

Bio-ontologies: current trends and future directions

by Olivier Bodenreider, Robert Stevens - Briefings in Bioinformatics , 2006
"... In recent years, as a knowledge-based discipline, bioinformatics has been made more computationally amenable. After its beginnings as a technology advocated by computer scientists to overcome problems of heterogeneity, ontology has been taken up by biologists themselves as a means to consistently an ..."
Abstract - Cited by 121 (7 self) - Add to MetaCart
In recent years, as a knowledge-based discipline, bioinformatics has been made more computationally amenable. After its beginnings as a technology advocated by computer scientists to overcome problems of heterogeneity, ontology has been taken up by biologists themselves as a means to consistently annotate features from genotype to phenotype. In medical informatics, artifacts called ontologies have been used for a longer period of time to produce controlled lexicons for coding schemes. In this article, we review the current position in ontologies and how they have become institutionalized within biomedicine. As the field has matured, the much older philosophical aspects of ontology have come into play. With this and the institutionalization of ontology has come greater formality. We review this trend and what benefits it might bring to ontologies and their use within biomedicine.
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...t is to belong to one of the classes, categories or types in that model. An ontology, more formally, is a set of logic axioms that form a model of a portion of (a conceptualization) of reality (after =-=[6]-=-). There are many artifacts that are called ontology. One’s bias usually depends on purpose for modeling, representation used for modeling, and philosophical viewpoint [5]. What computer scientists ca...

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