Representing knowledge about researchers and research communities is a prime use case for distributed, locally maintained, interlinked and highly structured information in the spirit of the Semantic Web. In this paper we describe the publicly available ‘Semantic Web for Research Communities’ ( ) ontology, in which research communities and relevant related concepts are modelled. We describe the design decisions that underlie the ontology and report on both experiences with and known usages of the Ontology. We believe that for making the Semantic Web reality the re-usage of ontologies and their continuous improvement by user communities is crucial. Our contribution aims to provide a description and usage guidelines to make the value of the explicit and to facilitate its re-use.
%0 Book Section
%1 citeulike:3498063
%A Sure, York
%A Bloehdorn, Stephan
%A Haase, Peter
%A Hartmann, Jens
%A Oberle, Daniel
%D 2005
%J Progress in Artificial Intelligence
%K diplomarbeit
%P 218--231
%R http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11595014\_22
%T The Ontology – Semantic Web for Research Communities
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11595014\_22
%X Representing knowledge about researchers and research communities is a prime use case for distributed, locally maintained, interlinked and highly structured information in the spirit of the Semantic Web. In this paper we describe the publicly available ‘Semantic Web for Research Communities’ ( ) ontology, in which research communities and relevant related concepts are modelled. We describe the design decisions that underlie the ontology and report on both experiences with and known usages of the Ontology. We believe that for making the Semantic Web reality the re-usage of ontologies and their continuous improvement by user communities is crucial. Our contribution aims to provide a description and usage guidelines to make the value of the explicit and to facilitate its re-use.
@incollection{citeulike:3498063,
abstract = {Representing knowledge about researchers and research communities is a prime use case for distributed, locally maintained, interlinked and highly structured information in the spirit of the Semantic Web. In this paper we describe the publicly available ‘Semantic Web for Research Communities’ ( ) ontology, in which research communities and relevant related concepts are modelled. We describe the design decisions that underlie the ontology and report on both experiences with and known usages of the Ontology. We believe that for making the Semantic Web reality the re-usage of ontologies and their continuous improvement by user communities is crucial. Our contribution aims to provide a description and usage guidelines to make the value of the explicit and to facilitate its re-use.},
added-at = {2008-12-03T16:59:16.000+0100},
author = {Sure, York and Bloehdorn, Stephan and Haase, Peter and Hartmann, Jens and Oberle, Daniel},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/20e7106e5ddba19fefece49aa78c3659b/dboehler},
citeulike-article-id = {3498063},
doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11595014\_22},
interhash = {bb6a2d39bdd32b9b596bba2d8f0c01cf},
intrahash = {0e7106e5ddba19fefece49aa78c3659b},
journal = {Progress in Artificial Intelligence},
keywords = {diplomarbeit},
pages = {218--231},
posted-at = {2008-11-09 13:44:05},
priority = {5},
timestamp = {2008-12-03T17:06:48.000+0100},
title = {The Ontology – Semantic Web for Research Communities},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11595014\_22},
year = 2005
}