logging in or signing up introduction aSGuest126815 Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 1 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: February 14, 2012 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript PowerPoint Presentation: The Semantic Web: Ontologies and OWL Ian Horrocks and Alan RectorIntroduction to the Semantic Web: Introduction to the Semantic WebHistory of the Semantic Web: History of the Semantic Web Web was “invented” by Tim Berners-Lee (amongst others), a physicist working at CERN TBL’s original vision of the Web was much more ambitious than the reality of the existing (syntactic) Web: TBL (and others) have since been working towards realising this vision, which has become known as the Semantic Web E.g., article in May 2001 issue of Scientific American… “... a goal of the Web was that, if the interaction between person and hypertext could be so intuitive that the machine-readable information space gave an accurate representation of the state of people's thoughts, interactions, and work patterns, then machine analysis could become a very powerful management tool, seeing patterns in our work and facilitating our working together through the typical problems which beset the management of large organizations.”PowerPoint Presentation: Scientific American, May 2001: Beware of the HypeBeware of the Hype: Beware of the Hype Hype seems to suggest that Semantic Web means: “semantics + web = AI” “A new form of Web content that is meaningful to computers will unleash a revolution of new abilities” More realistic to think of it as meaning: “semantics + web + AI = more useful web” Realising the complete “vision” is too hard for now (probably) But we can make a start by adding semantic annotation to web resources Images from Christine Thompson and David BoothWhere we are Today: the Syntactic Web: Where we are Today: the Syntactic Web [Hendler & Miller 02]The Syntactic Web is…: The Syntactic Web is… A hypermedia, a digital library A library of documents called (web pages) interconnected by a hypermedia of links A database, an application platform A common portal to applications accessible through web pages, and presenting their results as web pages A platform for multimedia BBC Radio 4 anywhere in the world! Terminator 3 trailers! A naming scheme Unique identity for those documents A place where computers do the presentation (easy) and people do the linking and interpreting (hard). Why not get computers to do more of the hard work? [Goble 03]Hard Work using the Syntactic Web…: Hard Work using the Syntactic Web… Find images of Peter Patel-Schneider, Frank van Harmelen and Alan Rector… Rev. Alan M. Gates, Associate Rector of the Church of the Holy Spirit, Lake Forest, IllinoisImpossible (?) using the Syntactic Web…: Impossible (?) using the Syntactic Web… Complex queries involving background knowledge Find information about “animals that use sonar but are not either bats or dolphins” Locating information in data repositories Travel enquiries Prices of goods and services Results of human genome experiments Finding and using “ web services ” Visualise surface interactions between two proteins Delegating complex tasks to web “ agents ” Book me a holiday next weekend somewhere warm, not too far away, and where they speak French or English , e.g., Barn OwlWhat is the Problem?: What is the Problem? Consider a typical web page: Markup consists of: rendering information (e.g., font size and colour) Hyper-links to related content Semantic content is accessible to humans but not (easily) to computers…What information can we see…: What information can we see… WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide web conference Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA 7-11 may 2002 1 location 5 days learn interact Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed Tim berners-lee Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, … Ian Foster Ian is the pioneer of the Grid, the next generation internet …What information can a machine see…: What information can a machine see… WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide web conference Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA 7-11 may 2002 1 location 5 days learn interact Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed Tim berners-lee Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, … Ian Foster Ian is the pioneer of the Grid, the next generation internet …Solution: XML markup with “meaningful” tags?: Solution: XML markup with “meaningful” tags? <name> WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide webcon </name> <location> Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA </location> <date> 7-11 may 2002 </date> <slogan> 1 location 5 days learn interact </slogan> <participants> Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire </participants> <introduction> Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed </introduction> <speaker> Tim berners-lee </speaker> <bio> Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, </bio> …But What About…: But What About… <conf> WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide webcon </conf> <place> Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA </place> <date> 7-11 may 2002 </date> <slogan> 1 location 5 days learn interact </slogan> <participants> Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire </participants> <introduction> Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed </introduction> <speaker> Tim berners-lee </speaker> <bio> Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, …Machine sees…: Machine sees… < name > WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide webc </ name > < location > Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA </ location > < date > 7-11 may 2002 </ date > < slogan > 1 location 5 days learn interact </ slogan > < participants > Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire </ participants > < introduction > Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed </ introduction > < speaker > Tim berners-lee </ speaker > < bio > Tim is the well known inventor of the W </ bio > < speaker > Ian Foster </ speaker > < bio > Ian is the pioneer of the Grid, the ne </ bio >Need to Add “Semantics”: Need to Add “Semantics” External agreement on meaning of annotations E.g., Dublin Core Agree on the meaning of a set of annotation tags Problems with this approach Inflexible Limited number of things can be expressed Use Ontologies to specify meaning of annotations Ontologies provide a vocabulary of terms New terms can be formed by combining existing ones Meaning ( semantics ) of such terms is formally specified Can also specify relationships between terms in multiple ontologiesOntology: Origins and History: a philosophical discipline — a branch of philosophy that deals with the nature and the organisation of reality Science of Being (Aristotle, Metaphysics, IV, 1) Tries to answer the questions: What characterizes being? Eventually, what is being? Ontology: Origins and History Ontology in PhilosophyOntology in Linguistics: Ontology in Linguistics “Tank“ Referent Form Stands for Relates to activates Concept [Ogden, Richards, 1923] ?Ontology in Computer Science: An ontology is an engineering artifact: It is constituted by a specific vocabulary used to describe a certain reality, plus a set of explicit assumptions regarding the intended meaning of the vocabulary. Thus, an ontology describes a formal specification of a certain domain: Shared understanding of a domain of interest Formal and machine manipulable model of a domain of interest “An explicit specification of a conceptualisation” [Gruber93] Ontology in Computer ScienceStructure of an Ontology: Structure of an Ontology Ontologies typically have two distinct components: Names for important concepts in the domain Elephant is a concept whose members are a kind of animal Herbivore is a concept whose members are exactly those animals who eat only plants or parts of plants Adult_Elephant is a concept whose members are exactly those elephants whose age is greater than 20 years Background knowledge/constraints on the domain Adult_Elephant s weigh at least 2,000 kg All Elephant s are either African_Elephant s or Indian_Elephant s No individual can be both a Herbivore and a CarnivoreA Semantic Web — First Steps: A Semantic Web — First Steps Extend existing rendering markup with semantic markup Metadata annotations that describe content/funtion of web accessible resources Use Ontologies to provide vocabulary for annotations “Formal specification” is accessible to machines A prerequisite is a standard web ontology language Need to agree common syntax before we can share semantics Syntactic web based on standards such as HTTP and HTML Make web resources more accessible to automated processesOntology Design and Deployment: Ontology Design and Deployment Given key role of ontologies in the Semantic Web, it will be essential to provide tools and services to help users: Design and maintain high quality ontologies, e.g.: Meaningful — all named classes can have instances Correct — captured intuitions of domain experts Minimally redundant — no unintended synonyms Richly axiomatised — (sufficiently) detailed descriptions Store (large numbers) of instances of ontology classes, e.g.: Annotations from web pages Answer queries over ontology classes and instances, e.g.: Find more general/specific classes Retrieve annotations/pages matching a given description Integrate and align multiple ontologiesExample Ontology: Example Ontology You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
introduction aSGuest126815 Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 1 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: February 14, 2012 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript PowerPoint Presentation: The Semantic Web: Ontologies and OWL Ian Horrocks and Alan RectorIntroduction to the Semantic Web: Introduction to the Semantic WebHistory of the Semantic Web: History of the Semantic Web Web was “invented” by Tim Berners-Lee (amongst others), a physicist working at CERN TBL’s original vision of the Web was much more ambitious than the reality of the existing (syntactic) Web: TBL (and others) have since been working towards realising this vision, which has become known as the Semantic Web E.g., article in May 2001 issue of Scientific American… “... a goal of the Web was that, if the interaction between person and hypertext could be so intuitive that the machine-readable information space gave an accurate representation of the state of people's thoughts, interactions, and work patterns, then machine analysis could become a very powerful management tool, seeing patterns in our work and facilitating our working together through the typical problems which beset the management of large organizations.”PowerPoint Presentation: Scientific American, May 2001: Beware of the HypeBeware of the Hype: Beware of the Hype Hype seems to suggest that Semantic Web means: “semantics + web = AI” “A new form of Web content that is meaningful to computers will unleash a revolution of new abilities” More realistic to think of it as meaning: “semantics + web + AI = more useful web” Realising the complete “vision” is too hard for now (probably) But we can make a start by adding semantic annotation to web resources Images from Christine Thompson and David BoothWhere we are Today: the Syntactic Web: Where we are Today: the Syntactic Web [Hendler & Miller 02]The Syntactic Web is…: The Syntactic Web is… A hypermedia, a digital library A library of documents called (web pages) interconnected by a hypermedia of links A database, an application platform A common portal to applications accessible through web pages, and presenting their results as web pages A platform for multimedia BBC Radio 4 anywhere in the world! Terminator 3 trailers! A naming scheme Unique identity for those documents A place where computers do the presentation (easy) and people do the linking and interpreting (hard). Why not get computers to do more of the hard work? [Goble 03]Hard Work using the Syntactic Web…: Hard Work using the Syntactic Web… Find images of Peter Patel-Schneider, Frank van Harmelen and Alan Rector… Rev. Alan M. Gates, Associate Rector of the Church of the Holy Spirit, Lake Forest, IllinoisImpossible (?) using the Syntactic Web…: Impossible (?) using the Syntactic Web… Complex queries involving background knowledge Find information about “animals that use sonar but are not either bats or dolphins” Locating information in data repositories Travel enquiries Prices of goods and services Results of human genome experiments Finding and using “ web services ” Visualise surface interactions between two proteins Delegating complex tasks to web “ agents ” Book me a holiday next weekend somewhere warm, not too far away, and where they speak French or English , e.g., Barn OwlWhat is the Problem?: What is the Problem? Consider a typical web page: Markup consists of: rendering information (e.g., font size and colour) Hyper-links to related content Semantic content is accessible to humans but not (easily) to computers…What information can we see…: What information can we see… WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide web conference Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA 7-11 may 2002 1 location 5 days learn interact Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed Tim berners-lee Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, … Ian Foster Ian is the pioneer of the Grid, the next generation internet …What information can a machine see…: What information can a machine see… WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide web conference Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA 7-11 may 2002 1 location 5 days learn interact Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed Tim berners-lee Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, … Ian Foster Ian is the pioneer of the Grid, the next generation internet …Solution: XML markup with “meaningful” tags?: Solution: XML markup with “meaningful” tags? <name> WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide webcon </name> <location> Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA </location> <date> 7-11 may 2002 </date> <slogan> 1 location 5 days learn interact </slogan> <participants> Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire </participants> <introduction> Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed </introduction> <speaker> Tim berners-lee </speaker> <bio> Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, </bio> …But What About…: But What About… <conf> WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide webcon </conf> <place> Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA </place> <date> 7-11 may 2002 </date> <slogan> 1 location 5 days learn interact </slogan> <participants> Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire </participants> <introduction> Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed </introduction> <speaker> Tim berners-lee </speaker> <bio> Tim is the well known inventor of the Web, …Machine sees…: Machine sees… < name > WWW2002 The eleventh international world wide webc </ name > < location > Sheraton waikiki hotel Honolulu, hawaii, USA </ location > < date > 7-11 may 2002 </ date > < slogan > 1 location 5 days learn interact </ slogan > < participants > Registered participants coming from australia, canada, chile denmark, france, germany, ghana, hong kong, india, ireland, italy, japan, malta, new zealand, the netherlands, norway, singapore, switzerland, the united kingdom, the united states, vietnam, zaire </ participants > < introduction > Register now On the 7 th May Honolulu will provide the backdrop of the eleventh international world wide web conference. This prestigious event … Speakers confirmed </ introduction > < speaker > Tim berners-lee </ speaker > < bio > Tim is the well known inventor of the W </ bio > < speaker > Ian Foster </ speaker > < bio > Ian is the pioneer of the Grid, the ne </ bio >Need to Add “Semantics”: Need to Add “Semantics” External agreement on meaning of annotations E.g., Dublin Core Agree on the meaning of a set of annotation tags Problems with this approach Inflexible Limited number of things can be expressed Use Ontologies to specify meaning of annotations Ontologies provide a vocabulary of terms New terms can be formed by combining existing ones Meaning ( semantics ) of such terms is formally specified Can also specify relationships between terms in multiple ontologiesOntology: Origins and History: a philosophical discipline — a branch of philosophy that deals with the nature and the organisation of reality Science of Being (Aristotle, Metaphysics, IV, 1) Tries to answer the questions: What characterizes being? Eventually, what is being? Ontology: Origins and History Ontology in PhilosophyOntology in Linguistics: Ontology in Linguistics “Tank“ Referent Form Stands for Relates to activates Concept [Ogden, Richards, 1923] ?Ontology in Computer Science: An ontology is an engineering artifact: It is constituted by a specific vocabulary used to describe a certain reality, plus a set of explicit assumptions regarding the intended meaning of the vocabulary. Thus, an ontology describes a formal specification of a certain domain: Shared understanding of a domain of interest Formal and machine manipulable model of a domain of interest “An explicit specification of a conceptualisation” [Gruber93] Ontology in Computer ScienceStructure of an Ontology: Structure of an Ontology Ontologies typically have two distinct components: Names for important concepts in the domain Elephant is a concept whose members are a kind of animal Herbivore is a concept whose members are exactly those animals who eat only plants or parts of plants Adult_Elephant is a concept whose members are exactly those elephants whose age is greater than 20 years Background knowledge/constraints on the domain Adult_Elephant s weigh at least 2,000 kg All Elephant s are either African_Elephant s or Indian_Elephant s No individual can be both a Herbivore and a CarnivoreA Semantic Web — First Steps: A Semantic Web — First Steps Extend existing rendering markup with semantic markup Metadata annotations that describe content/funtion of web accessible resources Use Ontologies to provide vocabulary for annotations “Formal specification” is accessible to machines A prerequisite is a standard web ontology language Need to agree common syntax before we can share semantics Syntactic web based on standards such as HTTP and HTML Make web resources more accessible to automated processesOntology Design and Deployment: Ontology Design and Deployment Given key role of ontologies in the Semantic Web, it will be essential to provide tools and services to help users: Design and maintain high quality ontologies, e.g.: Meaningful — all named classes can have instances Correct — captured intuitions of domain experts Minimally redundant — no unintended synonyms Richly axiomatised — (sufficiently) detailed descriptions Store (large numbers) of instances of ontology classes, e.g.: Annotations from web pages Answer queries over ontology classes and instances, e.g.: Find more general/specific classes Retrieve annotations/pages matching a given description Integrate and align multiple ontologiesExample Ontology: Example Ontology