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SKG
2006
IEEE

Using Ontologies to Support Customisation and Maintain Interoperability in Distributed Information Systems with Application to t

14 years 5 months ago
Using Ontologies to Support Customisation and Maintain Interoperability in Distributed Information Systems with Application to t
Abstract. Global distributed systems must be standards-based to allow interoperability between all of their components. While this guarantees interoperability, it often causes local inflexibility and an inability to adapt to specialised local requirements. We show how local flexibility and global consistency can coexist by changing the way that we represent these systems. The proven technologies already in use in the Semantic Web, to support and interpret metadata annotation, provide a well-tested starting point. We can use OWL ontologies and RDF to describe distributed systems using a knowledge-based approach. This allows us to maintain separate local and global operational spaces which, in turn, gives us local flexibility and global consistency. The annotated and well-defined data is better structured, more easily maintained and less prone to errors since its purpose can be clearly determined prior to use. To illustrate the application of our approach in distributed systems, we p...
Nickolas J. G. Falkner, Paul D. Coddington, Andrew
Added 12 Jun 2010
Updated 12 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where SKG
Authors Nickolas J. G. Falkner, Paul D. Coddington, Andrew L. Wendelborn
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