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C-OWL: contextualizing ontologies

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Paolo Bouquet, Fausto Giunchiglia, Frank van Harmelen, Luciano Serafini, and ... P.F. Patel-Schneider, P. Hayes, and I. Horrocks. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: C-OWL: contextualizing ontologies


1
C-OWL contextualizing ontologies
  • Fausto Giunchiglia
  • October 22, 2003
  • Paolo Bouquet, Fausto
    Giunchiglia, Frank van Harmelen, Luciano
    Serafini, and Heiner Stuckenschmidt

2
The Talk
  • Ontologies vs. Contexts
  • A (restated) global semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • Three motivating examples
  • A (new) local models semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • C-OWL extending OWL with (context) mappings

3
Ontologies vs. Contexts
  • An Ontology is a model of some domain which is
    supposed to encode a view common to a set of
    different parties
  • An ontology is built to be shared
  • A Context is a model of some domain which is
    supposed to encode a view of a party
  • A context is built to be kept local (where
    local implies not shared)
  • A context and an ontology of the same domain are
    likely to be very different (different goals,
    different approach, )

4
Pros and Contras
  • Ontologies
  • Strengths
  • easy exchange of information
  • Weaknesses
  • consensus must be reached about their contents
  • maintenance may become arbitrarily hard
  • Contexts
  • Strengths
  • easy to define and to maintain
  • can be constructed with no consensus with the
    other parties
  • Weaknesses
  • Exchange of information by constructing explicit
    mappings among the elements of the contexts of
    the involved parties

5
Contextual Ontologies
  • Contextual ontology Ontology Context mappings
  • Key idea (in two steps)
  • Share as much as possible (OWL import construct)
  • Keep it local whenever sharing does not work
    (C-OWL context mappings)
  • Notes
  • In many (most in the Web?) cases sharing does not
    work and produces undesired results (semantic
    heterogeneity)
  • Using context allows for incremental, piece-wise
    construction of the Semantic Web (bottom up vs.
    top down approach).

6
The Talk
  • Contexts vs. Ontologies
  • A (restated) global semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • Three motivating examples
  • A (new) local models semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • C-OWL extending OWL with (context) mappings

7
A Global Semantics for OWL
  • Index OWL Ontologies lti, Oigt and their languages
    (e.g., iC, jE, i?r.C)
  • (Local language). A local concept (role,
    individual), Ci (Ri, Oi) is an element of C that
    appears in Oi either without indexes or with
    index equal to i.
  • (Foreign language) Anything (concept, role,
    individual) which is not local
  • (OWL space). An OWL space is a family of
    ontologies lti, Oigt such that the language of
    every Oi contains all the other foreign languages

8
A Global Semantics for OWL (conted)
  • (OWL interpretation). An OWL interpretation for
    the OWL space lti, Oigt is a pair I lt?I, (.)Igt,
    such that
  • I(i, C) ? ?I for any i ? I and C ? Ci
  • I(i, r) ? ?I x ?I for any i ? I and r ? Ri
  • I(i, o) ? ?I for any i ? I and o ? Oi
  • With ?I domain of interpretation and
  • (.)I interpretation function
  • Note a global interpretation!

9
A Global Semantics for OWL (conted)
  • (OWL axiom and fact satisfiability). I satisfies
    a fact or an axiom ø of Oi according to the
    rules defined in
  • P.F. Patel-Schneider, P. Hayes, and I.
    Horrocks. Web Ontology Language (OWL) Abstract
    Syntax and Semantics. Technical report, W3C,
    February 2003.
  • An OWL interpretation I satisfies an OWL space
    lti, Oigt, if I satisfies each axiom and fact of
    Oi, for any i

10
The Talk
  • Contexts vs. Ontologies
  • A (restated) global semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • Three motivating examples
  • A (new) local models semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • C-OWL extending OWL with (context) mappings

11
Example 1 directionality
  • Need to keep track of source and target ontology
  • Example
  • Construct O2 by importing O1 and adding it some
    new axiom
  • Want that axioms added to O2 do not affect O1
  • O1 contains axioms A B and C D
  • O2 contains also axiom 1B 1C
  • In new semantics, we want 1A 1D in O2, but
    not in O1.

12
Example 1 (conted) directionality
  • We want to avoid propagation of inconsistency
  • Example
  • O1 contains axioms A B and C D
  • O2 contains also axiom 1B 1C
  • We want to derive 1A 1D in O2 but not in O1
  • O2 contains also 1A(a) and 1 not D(a)
  • O2 is inconsistent
  • In new semantics, we want to keep O1 consistent

13
Example 2 local domains
  • Need to give up hypothesis that of single global
    domain of interpretation
  • Example
  • Car manufacturing ontology OWCM with domain of
    interpretation the totality of cars
  • individual constants Diesel and Petrol for Diesel
    engine and petrol engine
  • Axiom a car has only one engine which is either
    Diesel or petrol
  • Car (?1) hasEngine.Diesel, Petrol
  • Diesel ? Petrol
  • Ferrari ontology, OFerrari describing Ferraris
    production
  • Imports OWCM standard
  • Axiom engine of a Ferrari is either an F23 or
    and F34i
  • Ferrari (WCMcar (?1) (WCMhasEngine).F23,
    F34i
  • F23?F34i
  • In new semantics, we want to avoid (F23)IFerrari
    (Diesel)IWCM since Ferrari produces only petrol
    engines

14
Example 3 context mappings
  • Need to state that two elements of two
    ontologies, though being extensionally different,
    are contextually related
  • Example
  • OFIAT describes cars from manufacturer point of
    view
  • OSale describes cars from car vendor point of
    view
  • OFIAT and OSale are largely independent and
    different
  • Two concepts of car defined in OFIAT and OSale,
    (i.e. SaleCar and FIATCar) may be very
    different, still describing same real world
    object (different viewpoints)
  • Not possible to state relation between two
    concepts with OWL syntax

15
The Talk
  • Contexts vs. Ontologies
  • A (restated) global semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • Three motivating examples
  • A (new) local models semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • C-OWL extending OWL with (context) mappings

16
Exampe 1 Directionality
  • Consider all (local) ontologies as part of a OWL
    space
  • Split global interpretation into a family of
    local interpretations, one for each ontology
  • Allow for an ontology to be locally inconsistent
    (i.e., not to have a local interpretation)
  • Technically Associate inconsistent ontologies to
    a special interpretation, called a hole, that
    verifies any set of axioms

17
Example 2 Local Domains
  • Associate to each ontology a local domain
  • Local domains may overlap (two ontologies may
    refer to the same object)
  • Technically An OWL interpretation with local
    domains for the OWL space lti, Oigt is a family I
    Ii, where each Ii lt?Ii, (.)Iigt, called the
    local interpretation of Oi, is either an
    interpretation of Li on ?Ii, or a hole

18
The Talk
  • Contexts vs. Ontologies
  • A (restated) global semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • Three motivating examples
  • A (new) local models semantics for OWL
    Intuitions
  • C-OWL extending OWL with (context) mappings

19
Example 3 adding context mappings to syntax
  • (Bridge rules). A bridge rule from i to j is a
    statement of one of the four following forms,
  • where x and y are concepts, or individuals, or
    roles of the languages Li and Lj
  • (Context mapping). Given a OWL space lti, Oigt a
    mapping Mij from Oi to Oj is a set of bridge
    rules from Oi to Oj.

20
Context mappings (conted)
  • (Contextual ontology) It is a local ontology
    plus a set of bridge rules (context mappings). We
    sometimes write context meaning contextual
    ontology.
  • (Context space). A context space is the pair
  • OWL space lti, Oigt (of local ontologies)
  • family Mij of (context) mappings from i to j,
    for any pair i,j
  • (Interpretation for context spaces). It is the
    pair
  • I, where I is an OWL interpretation with holes
    and local domains and
  • rij, the domain relation from i to j, is a subset
    of ?Ii x ?Ii

21
Examples Context mappings
  • From example 3 SaleCar and FIATcar describe
    the same set of objects from two different
    viewpoints
  • ()
  • Domain relation satisfying ()
  • rij(CarISale) CarIFIAT
  • From example 2

  • ()
  • Domain relation satisfying ()
  • rWCM, Ferrari(Petrol)IWCM ? F23IFerrari ,
    F34iIFerrari

22
Context OWL (C-OWL)
  • A contextual ontology is a pair
  • OWL ontology
  • a set of context mappings
  • where a mapping is a set of bridge rules with
    the same target ontology
  • A context mapping is a 4-tuple
  • A mapping identifier (URI)
  • A source context containing an OWL ontology
  • A target context containing an OWL ontology
  • A set of bridge rules from the local language of
    the source ontology to the local language of the
    target ontology
  • NOTE mappings are objects (!!)

23
Conclusions
  • Ontologies share knowledge
  • Contexts keep knowledge local (not shared)
  • Contextual ontologies share as much as possible,
    keep local whenever necessary
  • C-OWL (Context OWL)
  • OWL
  • Local models semantics
  • context mappings (limited, explicitly defined,
    visibility from outside)

24
Will C-OWL be of any use?
  • How often in the Web we will import ontologies
    and how often we will define context mappings
    (diversity as a defect, or diversity as a
    feature)?
  • Shouldnt the Semantic Web be a Web of Semantic
    links (e.g., context mappings)? Context mappings
    useful for maintaining alignment, propagating
    info, (semantics driven) navigation,
  • Shouldnt discovering context mappings (e.g.,
    Semantic matching) be one of the core issues in
    building the Semantic Web?

25
Context mappings (conted)
  • (Satisfiability of bridge rules)
  • A interpretation for a context space is a model
    for it if all the bridge rules are satisfied
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