Читать книгу Ontology Engineering - Elisa F. Kendall - Страница 7

Оглавление

Contents

Foreword by Dean Allemang

Foreword by Richard Mark Soley, Ph.D

Preface

1 Foundations

1.1 Background and Definitions

1.2 Logic and Ontological Commitment

1.3 Ontology-Based Capabilities

1.4 Knowledge Representation Languages

1.4.1 Description Logic Languages

1.5 Knowledge Bases, Databases, and Ontology

1.6 Reasoning, Truth Maintenance, and Negation

1.7 Explanations and Proof

2 Before You Begin

2.1 Domain Analysis

2.2 Modeling and Levels of Abstraction

2.3 General Approach to Vocabulary Development

2.4 Business Vocabulary Development

2.5 Evaluating Ontologies

2.6 Ontology Design Patterns

2.7 Selecting a Language

3 Requirements and Use Cases

3.1 Getting Started

3.2 Gathering References and Potentially Reusable Ontologies

3.3 A Bit About Terminology

3.4 Summarizing the Use Case

3.5 The “Body” of the Use Case

3.6 Creating Usage Scenarios

3.7 Flow of Events

3.8 Competency Questions

3.9 Additional Resources

3.10 Integration with Business and Software Requirements

4 Terminology

4.1 How Terminology Work Fits into Ontology Engineering

4.2 Laying the Groundwork

4.3 Term Excerption and Development

4.4 Terminology Analysis and Curation

4.4.1 Concept Labeling

4.4.2 Definitions

4.4.3 Synonyms

4.4.4 Identifiers and Identification Schemes

4.4.5 Classifiers and Classification Schemes

4.4.6 Pedigree and Provenance

4.4.7 Additional Notes (Annotations)

4.5 Mapping Terminology Annotations to Standard Vocabularies

5 Conceptual Modeling

5.1 Overview

5.2 Getting Started

5.3 Identifying Reusable Ontologies

5.4 Preliminary Domain Modeling

5.5 Naming Conventions for Web-Based Ontologies

5.6 Metadata for Ontologies and Model Elements

5.7 General Nature of Descriptions

5.8 Relationships and Properties

5.9 Individuals and Data Ranges

5.10 Other Common Constructs

6 Conclusion

Bibliography

Author’s Biographies

Ontology Engineering

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