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Journal ArticleDOI

Products and Services Ontologies: A Methodology for Deriving OWL Ontologies from Industrial Categorization Standards

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TLDR
It is argued that deriving products and services ontologies from industrial taxonomies is more feasible than manual ontology engineering and shown that the representation of the original semantics of the input standard is an important modeling decision that determines the usefulness of the resulting ontology.
Abstract
Using Semantic Web technologies for e-business tasks, like product search or content integration, requires ontologies for products and services. Their manual creation is problematic due to (1) the high specificity, resulting in a large number of concepts, and (2) the need for timely ontology maintenance due to product innovation; and due to cost, since building such ontologies from scratch requires significant resources. At the same time, industrial categorization standards, like UNSPSC, eCl@ss, eOTD, or the RosettaNet Technical Dictionary, reflect some degree of consensus and contain a wealth of concept definitions plus a hierarchy. They can thus be valuable input for creating domain ontologies. However, the transformation of existing standards, originally developed for some purpose other than ontology engineering, into useful ontologies is not as straightforward as it appears. In this paper, (1) we argue that deriving products and services ontologies from industrial taxonomies is more feasible than manual ontology engineering; (2) show that the representation of the original semantics of the input standard, especially the taxonomic relationship, is an important modeling decision that determines the usefulness of the resulting ontology; (3) illustrate the problem by analyzing existing ontologies derived from UNSPCS and eCl@ss; (4) present a methodology for creating ontologies in OWL based on the reuse of existing standards; and (5) demonstrate this approach by transforming eCl@ss 5.1 into a practically useful products and services ontology.

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Book ChapterDOI

GoodRelations: An Ontology for Describing Products and Services Offers on the Web

TL;DR: This paper analyzes the complexity of product description on the Semantic Web and defines the GoodRelations ontology that covers the representational needs of typical business scenarios for commodity products and services.
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Ontologies and the Semantic Web

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TL;DR: The impact of the expressiveness, the number of domain elements, the community size, the conceptual dynamics, and other variables on the feasibility of an ontology project are discussed.
References
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Book

Ontologies: A Silver Bullet for Knowledge Management and Electronic Commerce

Dieter Fensel
TL;DR: This second editionsystematically introduces the notion of ontologies to the non-expert reader and demonstrates in detail how to apply this conceptual framework for improved intranet retrieval of corporate information and knowledge and for enhanced Internet-based electronic commerce.
Journal ArticleDOI

What IS-A Is and Isn't: An Analysis of Taxonomic Links in Semantic Networks

TL;DR: In this article* the more common interpretations of IS-A are cataloged and some differences between systems that, on the surface, appear very similar are pointed out.
Book ChapterDOI

OWLIM – a pragmatic semantic repository for OWL

TL;DR: The experiment demonstrates that OWLIM can scale to millions of statements even on commodity desktop hardware, and shows that such reasoners can be efficient for very big knowledge bases, in scenarios when delete operations should not be handled in real-time.
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