Matches in ScholarlyData for { <https://w3id.org/scholarlydata/inproceedings/iswc2012/proceedings-2/paper-06> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 7 of
7
with 100 items per page.
- paper-06 type InProceedings.
- paper-06 label "Concept-Based Semantic Difference in Expressive Description Logics".
- paper-06 sameAs paper-06.
- paper-06 abstract "Detecting, much less understanding, the difference between two description logic based ontologies is challenging for ontology engineers due, in part, to the possibility of complex, non-local logic effects of axiom changes. First, it is often quite difficult to even determine which concepts have had their meaning altered by a change. Second, once a concept change is pinpointed, the problem of distinguishing whether the concept is directly or indirectly affected by a change has yet to be tackled. To address the first issue, various principled notions of ``semantic diff'' (based on deductive inseparability) have been proposed in the literature and shown to be computationally practical for the expressively restricted case of ELHr-terminologies. However, problems arise even for such limited logics as ALC: First, computation gets more difficult, becoming undecidable for logics such as SROIQ which underly the Web Ontology Language (OWL). Second, the presence of negation and disjunction make the standard semantic difference too sensitive to change: essentially, any logically effectual change always affects all terms in the ontology. In order to tackle these issues, we formulate the central notion of finding the minimal change set based on model inseparability, and present a method to differentiate changes which are specific to (thus directly affect) particular concept names. Subsequently we devise a series of computable approximations, and compare the variously approximated change sets over a series of versions of the NCI Thesaurus (NCIt).".
- paper-06 hasAuthorList authorList.
- paper-06 isPartOf proceedings-2.
- paper-06 title "Concept-Based Semantic Difference in Expressive Description Logics".