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Showing papers by "David Martin published in 2003"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: DAML-S is such a language it is a DAML+OIL ontology for describing Web services that a coalition of researchers created with support from DARPA.
Abstract: A key element to realizing the Semantic Web is developing a suitably rich language for encoding and describing Web content. Such a language must have a well defined semantics, be sufficiently expressive to describe the complex interrelationships and constraints between Web objects, and be amenable to automated manipulation and reasoning with acceptable limits on time and resource requirements. A key component of the Semantic Web services vision is the creation of a language for describing Web services. DAML-S is such a language it is a DAML+OIL ontology for describing Web services that a coalition of researchers created with support from DARPA.

314 citations



Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: This chapter proposes that an important new perspective on the semantic Web can be obtained by regarding its content as behavioral intelligence, and draws on the experience in agent development to elaborate the specification.
Abstract: Many researchers are working towards the goal of a semantic Web — a Web that is unambiguously computer interpretable, and thus very accessable to artificial intelligence. A semantic Web would allow artificial agents to do the work of searching for and utilizing services required by humans or organizations. DAML-S is a Web service ontology intended to facilitate the semantic Web by describing the properties and capabilities of Web-accessible services in an unambiguous, computer-interpretable form. In this chapter, we propose that an important new perspective on the semantic Web can be obtained by regarding its content as behavioral intelligence. The services encoded in DAML-S can then be viewed as specifications either for extensions of the user-owned agents attempting to exploit the services, or as independent, collaborative agents that can be ‘awakened’ to assist the user agents. We draw on our experience in agent development to elaborate the specification, particularly of the process ontology of DAML-S, in order to support this vision.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The BioSPICE member community has produced a software system that comprises contributions from approximately 20 participating laboratories integrated under theBioSPICE Dashboard, a graphical environment that combines Open Agent Architecture and NetBeans software technologies in a coherent, biologist-friendly user interface.
Abstract: The goal of the BioSPICE program is to create a framework that provides biologists access to the most current computational tools. At the program midpoint, the BioSPICE member community has produced a software system that comprises contributions from approximately 20 participating laboratories integrated under the BioSPICE Dashboard and a methodology for continued software integration. These contributed software modules are the BioSPICE Dashboard, a graphical environment that combines Open Agent Architecture and NetBeans software technologies in a coherent, biologist-friendly user interface. The current Dashboard permits data sources, models, simulation engines, and output displays provided by different investigators and running on different machines to work together across a distributed, heterogeneous network. Among several other features, the Dashboard enables users to create graphical workflows by configuring and connecting available BioSPICE components. Anticipated future enhancements to BioSPICE incl...

51 citations