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发信人: tyqqre (tyqqre), 信区: DataMining
标  题: CFP: Reference Ontology and Applications Ontology
发信站: 南京大学小百合站 (Fri May  2 08:50:40 2003)

CALL FOR PAPER


Workshop on Reference Ontology and Applications Ontology

26th German Conference on Artificial Intelligence

Hamburg, Germany, 15-18 Septemrber 2003


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A workshop devoted to the task of clarifying the range of current

approaches to ontology and of demonstrating their relative merits and

demerits will be held under the auspices of the 26th German Conference

on  Artificial  Intelligence, Hamburg, 15-18 September 2003.  Further

details are available  here:


http://ontology.buffalo.edu/ki2003


Deadline for submission of 3-page abstracts: June 15, 2003 

Notification of Acceptance: July 1, 2003 

Deadline for camera-ready (up to 10 pages) papers: August 1, 2003


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Background

----------


Two schools of thought are gradually beginning to crystallize in the

domain of information systems ontology. On the one hand is the school

which focuses primarily on the representational adequacy of an

underlying ontological theory, leaving for others the task of

transforming this theory into working applications. On the other hand is

the (much larger) school which focuses primarily on the construction of

ontologies as working applications at the expense of representational

adequacy, and which is associated with current developments under the

heading of the Semantic Web. The goal of the workshop is to bring

together representatives of these two schools of thought for a

structured debate, which is designed as a contribution to the

clarification of the foundations of information systems ontology in the

future. 


The terms 憆eference ontology?and 慳pplications ontology?were

introduced by Nicola Guarino, who draws the basic distinction as

follows: 


憫... what kinds of ontologies do we need? This is still an open issue.

Some people believe that very general ontologies involving rich

axiomatic characterizations are important, others think they are a waste

of time, and prefer to concentrate on lightweight ontologies, focusing

on the minimal terminological structure (often just a taxonomy) which

fits the needs of a specific community.拻


Guarino uses 憆eference ontology?(which he now calls 慺oundational

ontology? to refer to ontological theories whose focus is to clarify

the intended meanings of terms used in specific domains. Smith has

proposed a more radical definition within the framework of philosophical

realism: a reference ontology is a theory of some independently existing

domain of entities which  seeks to maximize descriptive or

representational adequacy to the maximal degree compatible with the

constraints of formal rigour and computational usefulness. 


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Objective

---------


One goal of this workshop would be to prepare the ground for more

coherent debate by fixing on one correct usage of terms such as

憆eference ontology? 慺oundational ontology, 慳pplication ontology?

憀ightweight ontology?and indeed of 憃ntology?itself.


Additional goals will be:


1. To clarify the range of current approaches to ontology and to

demonstrate their relative merits and demerits.


2. To set forth the basics of the reference ontology approach and of its

underlying rationale. To survey the institutions involved in developing

reference ontologies. To address the role of realism, and of intended

meanings, and intended models, in information systems ontology.


3. To set forth the basics of the application ontology approach and of

its relation to the use of the specific machinery of Description Logics.



4. To present reports on case studies of the use of ontology in

applications with special reference to domains such as medical

informatics and spatial reasoning.


The benefits of the reference ontology approach are that it can bring a

rich framework for resolving terminological incompatibilities and

classificatory underdetermination. The benefits of the applications

ontology approach are that it can yield ontologies which run in real

time.


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Format

------

The workshop will be a half-day event, featuring a maximum of 6 speakers

in all and leaving a large amount of time for open discussion. We will

seek a balance of speakers from both sides of the reference/applications

ontology spectrum. 


Contributions will be selected on the basis of short (3-page) abstracts,

which will be subject to a process of refereeing by the Scientific

Committee. Send abstract to the chair of the Scientific Committee: Chris

Menzel (cmezel@tamu.edu). The maximal length of final papers is 10

pages. Guideline for formatting camera-ready papers will be announced on

the workshop webpage (http://ontology.buffalo.edu/ki2003). The

proceedings of the workshop are to be published at CEUR-WS

(http://www.CEUR-WS.org). Papers not accepted for presentation during

the workshop may be included in the workshop notes to be published in

the IFOMIS Technical Report Series. 


Chris Menzel and Barry Smith will present opening statements. 


Smith will describe the work of IFOMIS (http://ifomis.de) and will

sketch the details of its partnership with Language and Computing

(http://www.landc.be) in constructing a reference ontology in the domain

of healthcare phenomena which will be tested by evaluating its success

in bringing about improvements in efficiency and reliability in the

field of medical text processing. 


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Workshop Organizer

------------------

Prof. Barry Smith

Institute for Formal Ontology and Medical Information Science University

of Leipzig 

H鋜telstra遝 16-18 

04107 Leipzig,

Germany 

phismith@buffalo.edu

http://ifomis.de 



Scientific Committee:

--------------------


Prof. Christopher Menzel (Chair)

Department of Philosophy 

Texas A&M University 

College Station, TX 77840-4237, USA 

cmenzel@tamu.edu 

http://philebus.tamu.edu/~cmenzel/ 


Dr Brandon Bennett

Division of Artificial Intelligence   School of Computing  

University of Leeds                   

Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom

brandon@comp.leeds.ac.uk

http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/brandon/ 


Dr. Thomas Bittner

Institute for Formal Ontology and Medical Information Science University

of Leipzig 

H鋜telstra遝 16-18 

04107 Leipzig, Germany 

thomas.bittner@ifomis.uni-leipzig.de


Dr. Werner CEUSTERS

Language & Computing nv                 

Hazenakkerstraat 20a                   

9520-Zonnegem, Belgium

werner@landc.be

http://www.landcglobal.com 


Prof. Dr. Ulrich Frank

Institut f黵 Wirtschafts- und Verwaltungsinformatik

Universit鋞 Koblenz-Landau

Universit鋞sstr. 1

56070 Koblenz, Germany

ulrich.frank@uni-koblenz.de

http://www.uni-koblenz.de/~iwi 


Nicola Guarino

Laboratory for Applied Ontology, 

Institute for Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, National Research

Council

Via Solteri, 38                      

38100 Trento, Italy

Nicola.Guarino@ladseb.pd.cnr.it

http://ontology.ip.rm.cnr.it 


Prof. Achille C. Varzi

Department of Philosophy

Columbia University

New York, NY 10027, USA

achille.varzi@columbia.edu

http://www.columbia.edu/~av72 






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