Handbook on Ontologies

Reference: Staab & Studer, eds. (2004). International Handbooks on Information Systems, Springer. Source file: CAP_LIB_05.pdf. URL

Summary

The Handbook on Ontologies provides a comprehensive reference on ontology research and practice. It is organized into four parts: (A) Ontology Representation and Reasoning (Description Logics, Frame Logic, RDF(S), OWL, ontology algebra); (B) Ontology Engineering (methodologies, large case studies, OntoClean, ontology learning, knowledge patterns, lexicons); (C) Ontology Infrastructure (management environments, problem-solving methods, multi-agent interaction, merging/mapping, browsing, visualization); and (D) Ontology Applications (knowledge management, eCommerce, semantic portals, hypermedia, enterprise integration, bioinformatics).

The introduction positions ontologies as formal, explicit specifications of shared conceptualizations and traces their rise from knowledge-based systems through the Semantic Web into mainstream information systems.

Key Ideas

  • Standard definition: ontology = formal, explicit specification of shared conceptualization.
  • Four-part organization: representation, engineering, infrastructure, applications.
  • Description Logics and Frame Logic as main representation paradigms.
  • OWL, RDF(S), and ontology algebra as Semantic Web foundations.
  • Multi-agent systems rely on ontologies for communication semantics.

Connections

Conceptual Contribution

Tags

#ontologies #semantic-web #handbook #knowledge-representation

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