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SEMWEB
2010
Springer

When owl: sameAs Isn't the Same: An Analysis of Identity in Linked Data

13 years 10 months ago
When owl: sameAs Isn't the Same: An Analysis of Identity in Linked Data
Abstract. In Linked Data, the use of owl:sameAs is ubiquitous in interlinking data-sets. There is however, ongoing discussion about its use, and potential misuse, particularly with regards to interactions with inference. In fact, owl:sameAs can be viewed as encoding only one point on a scale of similarity, one that is often too strong for many of its current uses. We describe how referentially opaque contexts that do not allow inference exist, and then outline some varieties of referentially-opaque alternatives to owl:sameAs. Finally, we report on an empirical experiment over randomly selected owl:sameAs statements from the Web of data. This theoretical apparatus and experiment shed light upon how owl:sameAs is being used (and misused) on the Web of data.
Harry Halpin, Patrick J. Hayes, James P. McCusker,
Added 15 Feb 2011
Updated 15 Feb 2011
Type Journal
Year 2010
Where SEMWEB
Authors Harry Halpin, Patrick J. Hayes, James P. McCusker, Deborah L. McGuinness, Henry S. Thompson
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