Ontologies on Demand? - A Description of the State-of-the-Art, Applications, Challenges and Trends for Ontology Learning from Text
P. Cimiano, J. Völker, and R. Studer. Information, Wissenschaft und Praxis, 57 (6-7):
315-320(October 2006)see the special issue for more contributions related to the Semantic Web.
Abstract
Ontologies are nowadays used for many applications requiring data, services and resources in general to be interoperable and machine understandable. Such applications are for example web service discovery and composition, information integration across databases, intelligent search, etc. The general idea is that data and services are semantically described with respect to ontologies,which are formal specifications of a domain of interest, and can thus be shared and reused in a way such that the shared meaning specified by the ontology remains formally the same across different parties and applications. As the cost of creating ontologies is relatively high, different proposals have emerged for learning ontologies from structured and unstructured resources. In this article we examine the maturity of techniques for ontology learning from textual resources, addressing the question whether the state-of-the-art is mature enough to produce ontologies ‘on demand’.
Description
Institut AIFB - Publikation: Ontologies on Demand? - A Description of the State-of-the-Art, Applications, Challenges and Trends for Ontology Learning from Text
%0 Journal Article
%1 cimiano2006ontologies
%A Cimiano, Philipp
%A Völker, Johanna
%A Studer, Rudi
%D 2006
%J Information, Wissenschaft und Praxis
%K learning ol_web2.0 ontology overview
%N 6-7
%P 315-320
%T Ontologies on Demand? - A Description of the State-of-the-Art, Applications, Challenges and Trends for Ontology Learning from Text
%U http://www.aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de/WBS/pci/Publications/iwp06.pdf
%V 57
%X Ontologies are nowadays used for many applications requiring data, services and resources in general to be interoperable and machine understandable. Such applications are for example web service discovery and composition, information integration across databases, intelligent search, etc. The general idea is that data and services are semantically described with respect to ontologies,which are formal specifications of a domain of interest, and can thus be shared and reused in a way such that the shared meaning specified by the ontology remains formally the same across different parties and applications. As the cost of creating ontologies is relatively high, different proposals have emerged for learning ontologies from structured and unstructured resources. In this article we examine the maturity of techniques for ontology learning from textual resources, addressing the question whether the state-of-the-art is mature enough to produce ontologies ‘on demand’.
@article{cimiano2006ontologies,
abstract = {Ontologies are nowadays used for many applications requiring data, services and resources in general to be interoperable and machine understandable. Such applications are for example web service discovery and composition, information integration across databases, intelligent search, etc. The general idea is that data and services are semantically described with respect to ontologies,which are formal specifications of a domain of interest, and can thus be shared and reused in a way such that the shared meaning specified by the ontology remains formally the same across different parties and applications. As the cost of creating ontologies is relatively high, different proposals have emerged for learning ontologies from structured and unstructured resources. In this article we examine the maturity of techniques for ontology learning from textual resources, addressing the question whether the state-of-the-art is mature enough to produce ontologies ‘on demand’.},
added-at = {2011-02-17T17:41:58.000+0100},
author = {Cimiano, Philipp and Völker, Johanna and Studer, Rudi},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2fe4c2950b5be221b493e29e4339240e8/dbenz},
description = {Institut AIFB - Publikation: Ontologies on Demand? - A Description of the State-of-the-Art, Applications, Challenges and Trends for Ontology Learning from Text},
file = {cimiano2006ontologies.pdf:cimiano2006ontologies.pdf:PDF},
groups = {public},
interhash = {aeb553dc2e190f0a5974dfdc709d450a},
intrahash = {fe4c2950b5be221b493e29e4339240e8},
journal = {Information, Wissenschaft und Praxis},
journalpub = {1},
keywords = {learning ol_web2.0 ontology overview},
month = OCT,
note = {see the special issue for more contributions related to the Semantic Web},
number = {6-7},
pages = {315-320},
timestamp = {2013-07-31T15:39:42.000+0200},
title = {Ontologies on Demand? - A Description of the State-of-the-Art, Applications, Challenges and Trends for Ontology Learning from Text},
url = {\url{http://www.aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de/WBS/pci/Publications/iwp06.pdf}},
username = {dbenz},
volume = 57,
year = 2006
}