Ecological Networks (ENs) are a way to describe the structures of existing real ecosystems and to plan their expansion, conservation and improvement. In this work, we present a model to represent the specifications for the local planning of ENs in a way that can support reasoning, e.g., to detect violations within new proposals of expansion, or to reason about improvements of the networks. Moreover, we describe an OWL ontology for the representation of ENs themselves. In the context of knowledge engineering, ENs provide a complex, inherently geographic domain that demands for the expressive power of a language like OWL augmented with the GeoSPARQL ontology to be conveniently represented. More importantly, the set of specification rules that we consider (taken from the project for a local EN implementation) constitute a challenging problem for representing constraints over complex geographic domains, and evaluating whether a given large knowledge base satisfies or violates them.
Representing Ecological Network Specifications with Semantic Web Techniques / Torta, Gianluca; Ardissono, Liliana; Savoca, Adriano; LA RICCIA, Luigi; Voghera, Angioletta. - ELETTRONICO. - 2:(2017), pp. 86-97. (Intervento presentato al convegno 9th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management (IC3K 2017) tenutosi a Madeira nel 1th-3th November 2017).
Representing Ecological Network Specifications with Semantic Web Techniques
Liliana Ardissono;Luigi La Riccia;Angioletta Voghera
2017
Abstract
Ecological Networks (ENs) are a way to describe the structures of existing real ecosystems and to plan their expansion, conservation and improvement. In this work, we present a model to represent the specifications for the local planning of ENs in a way that can support reasoning, e.g., to detect violations within new proposals of expansion, or to reason about improvements of the networks. Moreover, we describe an OWL ontology for the representation of ENs themselves. In the context of knowledge engineering, ENs provide a complex, inherently geographic domain that demands for the expressive power of a language like OWL augmented with the GeoSPARQL ontology to be conveniently represented. More importantly, the set of specification rules that we consider (taken from the project for a local EN implementation) constitute a challenging problem for representing constraints over complex geographic domains, and evaluating whether a given large knowledge base satisfies or violates them.Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2690423
Attenzione
Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo