Enabling technology for knowledge sharing
AI Magazine
Toward principles for the design of ontologies used for knowledge sharing
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: the role of formal ontology in the information technology
Knowledge engineering: principles and methods
Data & Knowledge Engineering - Special jubilee issue: DKE 25
Intelligent Agents on the Internet: Fact, Fiction, and Forecast
IEEE Expert: Intelligent Systems and Their Applications
Mobile Telescript Agents and the Web
COMPCON '96 Proceedings of the 41st IEEE International Computer Conference
Agent-Based Configuration Management of Distributed Applications
ICCDS '96 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Configurable Distributed Systems
Agent-based approach for information gathering on highly distributed and heterogeneous environment
ICPADS '96 Proceedings of the 1996 International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Systems
Methodologies, tools and languages for building ontologies: where is their meeting point?
Data & Knowledge Engineering
SAMBO-A system for aligning and merging biomedical ontologies
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
An ontology-based support for product conceptual design
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing
Merging ontologies requires interlocking institutional worlds
Applied Ontology
Knowledge accumulation through automatic merging of ontologies
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
Towards automatic merging of domain ontologies: The HCONE-merge approach
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
A four stage approach for ontology-based health information system design
Artificial Intelligence in Medicine
Intelligent agents: an emerging technology for next generation telecommunications?
INFOCOM'96 Proceedings of the Fifteenth annual joint conference of the IEEE computer and communications societies conference on The conference on computer communications - Volume 2
Multiple ontologies in action: Composite annotations for biosimulation models
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Hi-index | 12.05 |
Information technologies have played key roles in a wide range of medical settings such as hospital wards, operating rooms, emergency departments, and rehabilitation centers, rendering biomedical knowledge and data more accessible for human comprehension, comparison, analysis and communication. In this context, ontology has been recognized in the bioinformatics literature as a suitable technique for advancing knowledge and data representations in biomedicine. With the enhancement of automated reasoning and graphical visualizations, ontology-technology can assist human comprehensibility as well as mitigating the complexity inherent to this domain. Rehabilitation medicine has become an important part field in medicine, as distinct from preventive medicine, health care medicine and clinical medicine. In this article, we aim to address the ontological and epistemological issues of information services through the example of OntoRis, an ontology-based rehabilitation service OntoRis is designed to assist patients in acquiring actionable knowledge about his/her prescribed rehabilitation, and to expedite recovering through providing suggestions and advice drawn from evidence-based medicine. Moreover, OntoRis can also serve as an interactive learning platform for people who are interested in rehabilitation medicine.