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Conference

Web Reasoning and Rule Systems 

About: Web Reasoning and Rule Systems is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Description logic & Encyclopedia. Over the lifetime, 943 publications have been published by the conference receiving 6119 citations.


Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
22 Sep 2010
TL;DR: It is shown that, if the notion of repair studied in databases is used, inconsistency-tolerant query answering is intractable, even for the simplest form of queries.
Abstract: We address the problem of dealing with inconsistencies in Description Logic (DL) knowledge bases. Our general goal is both to study DL semantical frameworks which are inconsistency-tolerant, and to devise techniques for answering unions of conjunctive queries posed to DL knowledge bases under such inconsistency-tolerant semantics. Our work is inspired by the approaches to consistent query answering in databases, which are based on the idea of living with inconsistencies in the database, but trying to obtain only consistent information during query answering, by relying on the notion of database repair. We show that, if we use the notion of repair studied in databases, inconsistency-tolerant query answering is intractable, even for the simplest form of queries. Therefore, we study different variants of the repair-based semantics, with the goal of reaching a good compromise between expressive power of the semantics and computational complexity of inconsistency-tolerant query answering.

226 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
14 Feb 2018

188 citations

Book ChapterDOI
27 Jul 2013
TL;DR: Satisfiability of patterns under schemas, containment of queries for various features of XML used in queries, finding certain answers, and applications of pattern-based queries in reasoning about schema mappings for data exchange are looked at.
Abstract: We survey results about static analysis of pattern-based queries over XML documents. These queries are analogs of conjunctive queries, their unions and Boolean combinations, in which tree patterns play the role of atomic formulae. As in the relational case, they can be viewed as both queries and incomplete documents, and thus static analysis problems can also be viewed as finding certain answers of queries over such documents. We look at satisfiability of patterns under schemas, containment of queries for various features of XML used in queries, finding certain answers, and applications of pattern-based queries in reasoning about schema mappings for data exchange.

120 citations

Book ChapterDOI
22 Sep 2010
TL;DR: The complexity of query answering under Datalog+/- class of decidable languages is investigated, and in addition the novel class of sticky-join sets of TGDs is presented, which generalizes both sticky sets ofTGDs and so-called linear TGDs, an extension of inclusion dependencies.
Abstract: In ontology-based data access, an extensional database is enhanced by an ontology that generates new intensional knowledge which has to be considered when answering queries. In this setting, tractable data complexity (i.e., complexity w.r.t. the data only) of query answering is crucial, given the need to deal with large data sets. A well-known class of tractable ontology languages is the DL-lite family; however, in DL-lite it is impossible to express simple and useful integrity constraints that involve joins. To overcome this limitation, the Datalog+/- class of decidable languages uses tuple-generating dependencies (TGDs) as rules, thus allowing for conjunctions of atoms in the rule bodies, with suitable limitations to ensure decidability. In particular, sticky sets of TGDs allow for joins and variable repetition in rule bodies under certain conditions. In this paper we extend the notion of stickiness by introducing weaklysticky sets of TGDs, which also generalize the well-known weakly-acyclic sets of TGDs. We investigate the complexity of query answering under such language, and in addition we provide novel complexity results on weakly-acyclic sets of TGDs. Moreover, we present the novel class of sticky-join sets of TGDs, which generalizes both sticky sets of TGDs and so-called linear TGDs, an extension of inclusion dependencies.

115 citations

Book ChapterDOI
22 Sep 2010
TL;DR: This paper presents an expressive logic-based language for specifying and combining complex events, and provides both a syntax as well as a formal declarative semantics and presents the performance results showing the competitiveness of this approach.
Abstract: Complex Event Processing (CEP) is concerned with timely detection of complex events within multiple streams of atomic occurrences. It has useful applications in areas including financial services, mobile and sensor devices, click stream analysis etc. Numerous approaches in CEP have already been proposed in the literature. Event processing systems with a logic-based representation have attracted considerable attention as (among others reasons) they feature formal semantics and offer reasoning service. However logic-based approaches are not optimized for run-time event recognition (as they are mainly query-driven systems). In this paper, we present an expressive logic-based language for specifying and combining complex events. For this language we provide both a syntax as well as a formal declarative semantics. The language enables efficient run time event recognition and supports deductive reasoning. Execution model of the language is based on a compilation strategy into Prolog. We provide an implementation of the language, and present the performance results showing the competitiveness of our approach.

111 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Conference in previous years
YearPapers
202131
202051
201927
2018155
2017169
2016186