KEx: A Peer-to-Peer Solution for Distributed Knowledge Management
PAKM '02 Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Practical Aspects of Knowledge Management
The description logic handbook: theory, implementation, and applications
The description logic handbook: theory, implementation, and applications
The description logic handbook
Learning concept hierarchies from text corpora using formal concept analysis
Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research
Peer-to-peer semantic coordination
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
Constructing complex semantic mappings between XML data and ontologies
ISWC'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on The Semantic Web
Ontology Engineering --- The DOGMA Approach
Advances in Web Semantics I
A fuzzy clustering method of construction of ontology-based user profiles
Advances in Engineering Software
Ontology matching with semantic verification
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
On the discovery of subsumption relations for the alignment of ontologies
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
CSR: discovering subsumption relations for the alignment of ontologies
ESWC'08 Proceedings of the 5th European semantic web conference on The semantic web: research and applications
Knowledge-based sense disambiguation (almost) for all structures
Information Systems
Schema label normalization for improving schema matching
Data & Knowledge Engineering
Journal of Intelligent Information Systems
Ontology mapping using description logic and bridging axioms
Computers in Industry
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In most web sites, web-based applications (such as web portals, e-marketplaces, search engines), and in the file systems of personal computers, a wide variety of schemas (such as taxonomies, directory trees, thesauri, Entity-Relationship schemas, RDF Schemas) are published which (i) convey a clear meaning to humans (e.g. help in the navigation of large collections of documents), but (ii) convey only a small fraction (if any) of their meaning to machines, as their intended meaning is not formally/explicitly represented. In this paper we present a general methodology for automatically eliciting and representing the intended meaning of these structures, and for making this meaning available in domains like information integration and interoperability, web service discovery and composition, peer-to-peer knowledge management, and semantic browsers. We also present an implementation (called CtxMatch2) of how such a method can be used for semantic interoperability.