25 research outputs found

    Dynamic ontology evolution

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    Ontologies form the core of Semantic Web systems, and as such, they need to evolve to meet the changing needs of the system and its users. Most of current ontology evolution systems require user input during their processes. We propose Evolva, an ontology evolution framework, aiming to substantially reduce or even eliminate user input through exploiting various background knowledge sources. In this paper we present our ontology evolution approach, as well as our preliminary outcomes and future directions

    Evolva: a comprehensive approach to ontology evolution

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    Ontology evolution is increasingly gaining momentum in the area of Semantic Web research. Current approaches target the evolution in terms of either content, or change management, without covering both aspects in the same framework. Moreover, they are slowed down as they heavily rely on user input. We tackle the aforementioned issues by proposing Evolva, a comprehensive ontology evolution framework, which handles a complete ontology evolution cycle, and makes use of background knowledge for decreasing user input

    The OU Linked Open Data: production and consumption

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    The aim of this paper is to introduce the current efforts toward the release and exploitation of The Open University's (OU) Linked Open Data (LOD). We introduce the work that has been done within the LUCERO project in order to select, extract and structure subsets of information contained within the OU data sources and migrate and expose this information as part of the LOD cloud. To show the potential of such exposure we also introduce three different prototypes that exploit this new educational resource: (1) the OU expert search system, a tool focused on fnding the best experts for a certain topic within the OU staff; (2) the Buddy Study system, a tool that relies on Facebook information to identify common interest among friends and recommend potential courses within the OU that `buddies' can study together, and; (3) Linked OpenLearn, an application that enables exploring linked courses, Podcasts and tags to OpenLearn units. Its aim is to enhance the browsing experience for students, by detecting relevant educational resources on fly while reading an OpenLearn unit

    Catalyst: Piloting Capabilities for more Transparent Text Analytics

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    The surge and value of unstructured text is attracting substantial research and industry attention. Subsequently we are witnessing novel techniques and algorithms that are performing increasingly sophisticated text mining tasks. However the majority of such techniques are opaque, making it hard to trace the provenance of the analytical task on hand. We propose Catalyst, a framework to automatically transform, enrich and expose text into a linked graph-based layer to enable more transparent processing and access to the text elements. In brief, Catalyst extracts text dependencies, performs sentiment analysis, detects semantic relatedness, and links the text elements into a semantic triple-store that enables an easy access to the text entities through direct query functionalities. We plan to evaluate the performance of Catalyst by processing a dataset of user reviews around the dimensions of an evaluation model deployed in the context of e-government services

    Ontology evolution: a process-centric survey

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    Ontology evolution aims at maintaining an ontology up to date with respect to changes in the domain that it models or novel requirements of information systems that it enables. The recent industrial adoption of Semantic Web techniques, which rely on ontologies, has led to the increased importance of the ontology evolution research. Typical approaches to ontology evolution are designed as multiple-stage processes combining techniques from a variety of fields (e.g., natural language processing and reasoning). However, the few existing surveys on this topic lack an in-depth analysis of the various stages of the ontology evolution process. This survey extends the literature by adopting a process-centric view of ontology evolution. Accordingly, we first provide an overall process model synthesized from an overview of the existing models in the literature. Then we survey the major approaches to each of the steps in this process and conclude on future challenges for techniques aiming to solve that particular stage
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