Report Number: CSL-TN-99-1
Institution: Stanford University, Computer Systems Laboratory
Title: A Graph-Oriented Model for Articulation of Ontology Interdependencies
Author: Mitra, Prasenjit
Author: Wiederhold, Gio
Author: Kersten, Martin L.
Date: August 1999
Abstract: Ontologies are knowledge structures to explicate the
contents, essential properties, and relationships
between terms in a knowledge source. Many sources are
now accessible with associated ontologies. Most prior
work on use of ontologies relies on the construction of
a single global ontology covering all sources. Such an
approach is not scalable and maintainable especially when
the sources change frequently. We propose a scalable
and easily maintainable approach based on the
interoperation of ontologies. To handle user queries
crossing the boundaries of the underlying information
systems, the interoperation between the ontologies should
be precisely defined. Our approach is to use rules that cross
the semantic gap by creating an articulation or linkage
between the systems. The rules are generated using a
semi-automatic articulation tool with the help of a domain
expert. To make the ontologies amenable for automatic
composition based on the accumulated knowledge rules, we
represent them using a graph-oriented model extended with
a small algebraic operator set. ONION, a user-friendly toolkit,
aids the experts in bridging the semantic gap in real-life
settings. Our framework provides a sound foundation to
simplify the work of domain experts, enables integration
with public semantic dictionaries, like Wordnet, and will
derive ODMG-compliant mediators automatically.
http://i.stanford.edu/pub/cstr/reports/csl/tn/99/1/CSL-TN-99-1.pdf