Foundations of logic programming; (2nd extended ed.)
Foundations of logic programming; (2nd extended ed.)
TRIPLE - A Query, Inference, and Transformation Language for the Semantic Web
ISWC '02 Proceedings of the First International Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web
Description logic programs: combining logic programs with description logic
WWW '03 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on World Wide Web
OWL DL vs. OWL flight: conceptual modeling and reasoning for the semantic Web
WWW '05 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on World Wide Web
OWL/SWRL representation methodology for EXPRESS-driven product information model
Computers in Industry
Usage of the Jess Engine, Rules and Ontology to Query a Relational Database
RuleML '09 Proceedings of the 2009 International Symposium on Rule Interchange and Applications
KSEM'10 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Knowledge science, engineering and management
Defining the semantics of rule-based Web applications through model-driven development
International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science - Semantic Knowledge Engineering
Ontology query answering on databases
ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
Data based ontology construction coupled to expert system for steam turbine aided diagnostic
ISIICT'09 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Innovation and Information and Communication Technology
SWRL2COOL: object-oriented transformation of SWRL in the CLIPS production rule engine
SETN'12 Proceedings of the 7th Hellenic conference on Artificial Intelligence: theories and applications
ADNTIIC'11 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Advances in New Technologies, Interactive Interfaces and Communicability
Hi-index | 0.00 |
The wide scale usage of OWL for the formalization of real-world ontologies is currently influenced by important limitations which concern both its expressivity and the efficiency of OWL specific reasoning tools. While the expressivity limitations may be overcame by extending the OWL language (e.g. with rules), the reasoning with such heterogeneous knowledge bases is still an open issue. In this paper we propose OWL2Jess, a prototypical tool which enables the transformation of OWL ontologies to Jess rule bases and thus enables OWL models to be extended by means of rules. Facts are derived from an initial OWL file by one XSLT stylesheet, while the RDF(S) and OWL Semantics are pre-defined as Jess rules. By making hidden knowledge explicit, OWL2Jess achieves the knowledge compilation: the implicit subsumption and membership relations can be subsequently identified using the Jess rule engine.