TY - JOUR
T1 - A methodology for the semi-automatic creation of data-driven detailed business ontologies
AU - Paredes-Moreno, Antonio
AU - Martínez-López, Francisco J.
AU - Schwartz, David G.
PY - 2010/11
Y1 - 2010/11
N2 - In the context of technological expansion and development, companies feel the need to renew and optimize their information systems as they search for the best way to manage knowledge. Business ontologies within the semantic web are an excellent tool for managing knowledge within this space. The proposal in this article consists of a methodology for integrating information in companies. The application of this methodology results in the creation of a specific business ontology capable of semantic interoperability. The resulting ontology, developed from the information system of specific companies, represents the fundamental business concepts, thus making it a highly appropriate information integration tool. Its level of semantic expressivity improves on that of its own sources, and its solidity and consistency are guaranteed by means of checking by current reasoning tools. An ontology created in this way could drive the renewal processes of companies' information systems. A comparison is also made with a number of well-known business ontologies, and similarities and differences are drawn, highlighting the difficulty in aligning general ontologies to specific ones, such as the one we present.
AB - In the context of technological expansion and development, companies feel the need to renew and optimize their information systems as they search for the best way to manage knowledge. Business ontologies within the semantic web are an excellent tool for managing knowledge within this space. The proposal in this article consists of a methodology for integrating information in companies. The application of this methodology results in the creation of a specific business ontology capable of semantic interoperability. The resulting ontology, developed from the information system of specific companies, represents the fundamental business concepts, thus making it a highly appropriate information integration tool. Its level of semantic expressivity improves on that of its own sources, and its solidity and consistency are guaranteed by means of checking by current reasoning tools. An ontology created in this way could drive the renewal processes of companies' information systems. A comparison is also made with a number of well-known business ontologies, and similarities and differences are drawn, highlighting the difficulty in aligning general ontologies to specific ones, such as the one we present.
KW - Enterprise ontologies
KW - Interoperability
KW - Knowledge integration
KW - Semantic of data integration
KW - Semantic of integration information
KW - Semantic web
KW - e-Business
KW - eCommerce
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77955305184&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.is.2010.03.002
DO - 10.1016/j.is.2010.03.002
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AN - SCOPUS:77955305184
SN - 0306-4379
VL - 35
SP - 758
EP - 773
JO - Information Systems
JF - Information Systems
IS - 7
ER -