Patrick Lambrix
Department of Computer and Information Science, and Swedish e-Science Research Centre, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden
Valentina Ivanova
Department of Computer and Information Science, and Swedish e-Science Research Centre, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden
Ladda ner artikelIngår i: Scandinavian Conference on Health Informatics 2012; October 2-3; Linköping; Sverige
Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings 70:14, s. 67-67
Publicerad: 2012-09-28
ISBN: 978-91-7519-758-6
ISSN: 1650-3686 (tryckt), 1650-3740 (online)
In recent years many ontologies have been developed. The benefits of using ontologies include reuse; sharing and portability of knowledge across platforms; and improved documentation; maintenance; and reliability. Ontologies lead to a better understanding of a field and to more effective and efficient handling of information in that field. Often we also want to be able to use multiple ontologies. In these cases it is important to know the relationships between the terms in the different ontologies and much research has recently been done on ontology alignment; i.e.; finding mappings between terms in different ontologies.
Neither developing ontologies nor aligning ontologies are easy tasks and often the resulting ontologies and mappings are not consistent or complete. With the increased use of ontologies and ontology mappings in semantically-enabled applications such as ontology-based search and data integration; the issue of detecting and repairing defects in ontologies and ontology mappings has become increasingly important. These defects can lead to wrong or incomplete results for the applications.
[1] Ivanova V; Lambrix P; A System for Debugging Taxonomies and their Alignments; First International Workshop on Debugging Ontologies and Ontology Mappings; 2012.
[2] Lambrix P; Ivanova V; A unified approach for debugging is-a structure and mappings in networked taxonomies; submitted.