• Documents
  • Authors
  • Tables
  • Log in
  • Sign up
  • MetaCart
  • DMCA
  • Donate

CiteSeerX logo

Advanced Search Include Citations
Advanced Search Include Citations | Disambiguate

DMCA

Ontology Development 101: A Guide to Creating Your First Ontology (2001)

Cached

  • Download as a PDF

Download Links

  • [mia.ece.uic.edu]
  • [ce.sharif.edu]
  • [protege.stanford.edu]
  • [bmir.stanford.edu]
  • [ksl.stanford.edu]
  • [www.ksl.stanford.edu]
  • [www.cin.ufpe.br]
  • [dns2.icar.cnr.it]
  • [bmir.stanford.edu]
  • [itee.uq.edu.au]
  • [www.ling.helsinki.fi]
  • [www4.in.tum.de]
  • [people.cis.ksu.edu]
  • [people.cis.ksu.edu]
  • [www2.isye.gatech.edu]
  • [ksl-web.stanford.edu]
  • [dungun.ufro.cl]
  • [www-ksl.stanford.edu]
  • [www4.informatik.tu-muenchen.de]
  • [www.cin.ufpe.br]
  • [itee.uq.edu.au]

  • Save to List
  • Add to Collection
  • Correct Errors
  • Monitor Changes
by Natalya F. Noy , Deborah L. Mcguinness
Citations:830 - 5 self
  • Summary
  • Citations
  • Active Bibliography
  • Co-citation
  • Clustered Documents
  • Version History

BibTeX

@TECHREPORT{Noy01ontologydevelopment,
    author = {Natalya F. Noy and Deborah L. Mcguinness},
    title = {Ontology Development 101: A Guide to Creating Your First Ontology},
    institution = {},
    year = {2001}
}

Share

Facebook Twitter Reddit Bibsonomy

OpenURL

 

Abstract

In recent years the development of ontologies—explicit formal specifications of the terms in the domain and relations among them (Gruber 1993)—has been moving from the realm of Artificial-Intelligence laboratories to the desktops of domain experts. Ontologies have become common on the World-Wide Web. The ontologies on the Web range from large taxonomies categorizing Web sites (such as on Yahoo!) to categorizations of products for sale and their features (such as on Amazon.com). The WWW Consortium (W3C) is developing the Resource Description Framework (Brickley and Guha 1999), a language for encoding knowledge on Web pages to make it understandable to electronic agents searching for information. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), in conjunction with the W3C, is developing DARPA Agent Markup Language (DAML) by extending RDF with more expressive constructs aimed at facilitating agent interaction on the Web (Hendler and McGuinness 2000). Many disciplines now develop standardized ontologies that domain experts can use to share and annotate information in their fields. Medicine, for example, has produced large, standardized, structured vocabularies such as SNOMED (Price and Spackman 2000) and the semantic network of the Unified Medical Language System (Humphreys and Lindberg 1993). Broad general-purpose ontologies are

Keyphrases

ontology development    creating first ontology    world-wide web    artificial-intelligence laboratory    semantic network    electronic agent    web range    web site    broad general-purpose ontology    formal specification    large taxonomy    www consortium    domain expert    many discipline    expressive construct    agent interaction    defense advanced research project agency    unified medical language system    structured vocabulary    recent year    darpa agent markup language    resource description framework    web page    standardized ontology   

Powered by: Apache Solr
  • About CiteSeerX
  • Submit and Index Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Help
  • Data
  • Source
  • Contact Us

Developed at and hosted by The College of Information Sciences and Technology

© 2007-2019 The Pennsylvania State University