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ICLP
2005
Springer

OWL: A Description Logic Based Ontology Language

14 years 5 months ago
OWL: A Description Logic Based Ontology Language
Abstract Description Logics (DLs) are a family of class (concept) based knowledge representation formalisms. They are characterised by the use of various constructors to build complex concepts from simpler ones, an emphasis on the decidability of key reasoning tasks, and by the provision of sound, complete and (empirically) tractable reasoning services. Although they have a range of applications (e.g., reasoning with database schemas and queries [1, 2]), DLs are perhaps best known as the basis for ontology languages such as OIL, DAML+OIL and OWL [3]. The decision to base these languages on DLs was motivated by a requirement not only that key inference problems (such as class satisfiability and subsumption) be decidable, but that “practical” decision procedures and “efficient” implemented systems also be available. That DLs were able to meet the above requirements was the result of extensive research within the DL community over the course of the preceding 20 years or more. Thi...
Ian Horrocks
Added 27 Jun 2010
Updated 27 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where ICLP
Authors Ian Horrocks
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