Ontologies Are Us: A Unified Model of Social Networks and Semantics
P. Mika. The Semantic Web - ISWC 2005, Proceedings of the 4th International Semantic Web Conference, ISWC 2005, Galway, Ireland, November 6-10, Volume 3729 von Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Seite 522-536. Springer, (2005)
DOI: 10.1007/11574620_38
Zusammenfassung
In our work we extend the traditional bipartite model of ontologies with the social dimension, leading to a tripartite model of actors, concepts and instances. We demonstrate the application of this representation by showing how community-based semantics emerges from this model through a process of graph transformation. We illustrate ontology emergence by two case studies, an analysis of a large scale folksonomy system and a novel method for the extraction of community-based ontologies from Web pages.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 mika2005ontologies
%A Mika, Peter
%B The Semantic Web - ISWC 2005, Proceedings of the 4th International Semantic Web Conference, ISWC 2005, Galway, Ireland, November 6-10
%D 2005
%E Gil, Yolanda
%E Motta, Enrico
%E Benjamins, V. Richard
%E Musen, Mark A.
%I Springer
%K folksonomy model network ontology sematic social
%P 522-536
%R 10.1007/11574620_38
%T Ontologies Are Us: A Unified Model of Social Networks and Semantics
%V 3729
%X In our work we extend the traditional bipartite model of ontologies with the social dimension, leading to a tripartite model of actors, concepts and instances. We demonstrate the application of this representation by showing how community-based semantics emerges from this model through a process of graph transformation. We illustrate ontology emergence by two case studies, an analysis of a large scale folksonomy system and a novel method for the extraction of community-based ontologies from Web pages.
@inproceedings{mika2005ontologies,
abstract = {In our work we extend the traditional bipartite model of ontologies with the social dimension, leading to a tripartite model of actors, concepts and instances. We demonstrate the application of this representation by showing how community-based semantics emerges from this model through a process of graph transformation. We illustrate ontology emergence by two case studies, an analysis of a large scale folksonomy system and a novel method for the extraction of community-based ontologies from Web pages.},
added-at = {2012-10-28T23:15:26.000+0100},
author = {Mika, Peter},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/257cd06b0de6e2272b6e5a51154ea7d72/nosebrain},
booktitle = {The Semantic Web - ISWC 2005, Proceedings of the 4th International Semantic Web Conference, ISWC 2005, Galway, Ireland, November 6-10},
doi = {10.1007/11574620_38},
editor = {Gil, Yolanda and Motta, Enrico and Benjamins, V. Richard and Musen, Mark A.},
file = {mika2005ontologies.pdf:mika2005ontologies.pdf:PDF},
groups = {public},
interhash = {5ea12110b5bb0e3a8ad09aeb16a70cdb},
intrahash = {57cd06b0de6e2272b6e5a51154ea7d72},
keywords = {folksonomy model network ontology sematic social},
lastdatemodified = {2006-09-26},
lastname = {Mika},
longnotes = {[[http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/739485.html citeseer]]},
own = {notown},
pages = {522-536},
pdf = {mika05-ontologies.pdf},
publisher = {Springer},
read = {notread},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
timestamp = {2012-10-28T23:18:17.000+0100},
title = {Ontologies Are Us: A Unified Model of Social Networks and Semantics},
username = {dbenz},
volume = 3729,
year = 2005
}