Difference between revisions of "Ontology"

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==Definition==
 
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{{ {{PAGENAME}} }} [1]
  
== Summary==
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<!-- '''Source''':  R. Studer, V. R. Benjamins, and D. Fensel. Knowledge engineering: Principles and methods. Data and Knowledge Engineering (DKE), (25):161–197, 1998. -->
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==Description==
 
==Description==
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In computer and information science, an ontology formally represents knowledge as a hierarchy of concepts (classes) within a domain, using a shared vocabulary to denote the types, properties and interrelationships of those concepts. Ontologies are commonly encoded using ontology languages (e.g. the Web Ontology Language OWL). Ontologies are extensively used to model knowledge domains on the Semantic Web (e.g. the Knowledge Graph of Google), in systems engineering and software engineering, for biomedical and pharmaceutical information systems, and specific knowledge intensive custom applications.
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** Concise Oxford dictionary [[http://oasis.iaea.org/OASIS/OASIS/MTCD/Documents/IAEA_Style_Manual.pdf IAEA style manual page 15]] = British spelling, BUT '''iza/ize'''
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*Abbreviations and acronyms
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**Follow the IAEA Glossary *The IAEA glossary of abbreviations and acronyms http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/DSS/OASISGlossary.pdf
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**Acronyms and abbreviations which are not in the IAEA glossary should be added in Acronyms and abbreviations
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[[File:Capture.PNG|thumb|right|500px|Fig 1. Organisational context for KM. Reference:]]
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==References==
 
==References==
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[1] T. R. Gruber. A translation approach to portable ontologies. Knowledge Acquisition, 5(2):199-220, 1993. Available on line.
  
 
==Related articles==
 
==Related articles==
  
[[Category:]]
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[[Taxonomy]]
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[[Category:Knowledge organization system]]

Latest revision as of 09:56, 21 December 2015


Definition

A formal, explicit specification of a shared conceptualization [1]


Description

In computer and information science, an ontology formally represents knowledge as a hierarchy of concepts (classes) within a domain, using a shared vocabulary to denote the types, properties and interrelationships of those concepts. Ontologies are commonly encoded using ontology languages (e.g. the Web Ontology Language OWL). Ontologies are extensively used to model knowledge domains on the Semantic Web (e.g. the Knowledge Graph of Google), in systems engineering and software engineering, for biomedical and pharmaceutical information systems, and specific knowledge intensive custom applications.

References

[1] T. R. Gruber. A translation approach to portable ontologies. Knowledge Acquisition, 5(2):199-220, 1993. Available on line.

Related articles

Taxonomy