Creating Semantic Web Contents with Protégé-2000
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Supporting Collaborative Ontology Development in Protégé
ISWC '08 Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on The Semantic Web
MoKi: The Enterprise Modelling Wiki
ESWC 2009 Heraklion Proceedings of the 6th European Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web: Research and Applications
Will semantic web technologies work for the development of ICD-11?
ISWC'10 Proceedings of the 9th international semantic web conference on The semantic web - Volume Part II
A knowledge base driven user interface for collaborative ontology development
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
Ontology development for the masses: creating ICD-11 in WebProtégé
EKAW'10 Proceedings of the 17th international conference on Knowledge engineering and management by the masses
An analysis of collaborative patterns in large-scale ontology development projects
Proceedings of the sixth international conference on Knowledge capture
The OWL API: A Java API for OWL ontologies
Semantic Web
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ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
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ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
PoolParty: SKOS thesaurus management utilizing linked data
ESWC'10 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on The Semantic Web: research and Applications - Volume Part II
Web Intelligence and Agent Systems
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In this paper, we present WebProtégé---a lightweight ontology editor and knowledge acquisition tool for the Web. With the wide adoption of Web 2.0 platforms and the gradual adoption of ontologies and Semantic Web technologies in the real world, we need ontology-development tools that are better suited for the novel ways of interacting, constructing and consuming knowledge. Users today take Web-based content creation and online collaboration for granted. WebProtégé integrates these features as part of the ontology development process itself. We tried to lower the entry barrier to ontology development by providing a tool that is accessible from any Web browser, has extensive support for collaboration, and a highly customizable and pluggable user interface that can be adapted to any level of user expertise. The declarative user interface enabled us to create custom knowledge-acquisition forms tailored for domain experts. We built WebProtégé using the existing Protégé infrastructure, which supports collaboration on the back end side, and the Google Web Toolkit for the front end. The generic and extensible infrastructure allowed us to easily deploy WebProtégé in production settings for several projects. We present the main features of WebProtégé and its architecture and describe briefly some of its uses for real-world projects. WebProtégé is free and open source. An online demo is available at http://webprotege.stanford.edu.