Evaluating ontological decisions with OntoClean
Communications of the ACM - Ontology: different ways of representing the same concept
Roles, an interdisciplinary perspective
Applied Ontology - Roles, an interdisciplinary perspective
Content Ontology Design Patterns as Practical Building Blocks for Web Ontologies
ER '08 Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling
Instance Management Problems in the Role Model of Hozo
PRICAI '08 Proceedings of the 10th Pacific Rim International Conference on Artificial Intelligence: Trends in Artificial Intelligence
Ontology paper: FaBiO and CiTO: Ontologies for describing bibliographic resources and citations
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
The aggregation of heterogeneous metadata in web-based cultural heritage collections: a case study
International Journal of Web Engineering and Technology
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Recently, several ontologies have been introduced for semantic publishing. However, scholarly publishing, like other real-world domains, needs to be described also in terms of precise temporal durations and the particular contexts in which the relevant processes take place. For instance, a document changes status during its publication process, e.g., from "draft" to "submitted" to "under review" to "accepted for publication", and so on. Similarly, one's roles may change with time: one's affiliation with an academic institution or one's role as a journal editor are likely to change over time. Existing well-known ontologies used to describe individuals and bibliographic entities in the Linked Data are currently not able to model situations of temporary or context-dependent possession (e.g., the holding of a status or of a role). In this paper, we address this issue by introducing two ontologies for semantic publishing, the Publishing Roles Ontology and the Publishing Status Ontology, that define the roles of people and the statuses of documents in the scholarly publishing domain.