Ontology Engineering in a Networked World | ISBN 9783642247941

Ontology Engineering in a Networked World

herausgegeben von Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa, Asunción Gómez-Pérez, Enrico Motta und Aldo Gangemi
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonMari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa
Herausgegeben vonAsunción Gómez-Pérez
Herausgegeben vonEnrico Motta
Herausgegeben vonAldo Gangemi
Buchcover Ontology Engineering in a Networked World  | EAN 9783642247941 | ISBN 3-642-24794-6 | ISBN 978-3-642-24794-1
This book contributes to putting ontological engineering in a more realistic environment: out of the labs and into the real world (wide web), where reuse and inter-relationships are more the rule than exceptions.“ - from the foreword by Dr. V. Richard Benjamins

Ontology Engineering in a Networked World

herausgegeben von Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa, Asunción Gómez-Pérez, Enrico Motta und Aldo Gangemi
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonMari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa
Herausgegeben vonAsunción Gómez-Pérez
Herausgegeben vonEnrico Motta
Herausgegeben vonAldo Gangemi

The Semantic Web is characterized by the existence of a very large number of distributed semantic resources, which together define a network of ontologies. These ontologies in turn are interlinked through a variety of different meta-relationships such as versioning, inclusion, and many more. This scenario is radically different from the relatively narrow contexts in which ontologies have been traditionally developed and applied, and thus calls for new methods and tools to effectively support the development of novel network-oriented semantic applications.

This book by Suárez-Figueroa et al. provides the necessary methodological and technological support for the development and use of ontology networks, which ontology developers need in this distributed environment. After an introduction, in its second part the authors describe the NeOn Methodology framework. The book’s third part details the key activities relevant to the ontology engineering life cycle. For each activity, a general introduction, methodological guidelines, and practical examples are provided. The fourth part then presents a detailed overview of the NeOn Toolkit and its plug-ins. Lastly, case studies from the pharmaceutical and the fishery domain round out the work.

The book primarily addresses two main audiences: students (and their lecturers) who need a textbook for advanced undergraduate or graduate courses on ontology engineering, and practitioners who need to develop ontologies in particular or Semantic Web-based applications in general. Its educational value is maximized by its structured approach to explaining guidelines and combining them with case studies and numerous examples. The description of the open source NeOn Toolkit provides an additional asset, as it allows readers to easily evaluate and apply the ideas presented.