In the present global society, information has to be exchangeable in open and dynamic environments, where interacting peers do not necessarily share a common understanding of the world at hand, and do not have a complete picture of the context where the interaction occurs. In this paper, we present the Esteem approach and the related peer architecture for emergent semantics in dynamic and multi-knowledge environments. In Esteem, semantic communities are built around declared interests in the form of manifesto ontologies, and their autonomous nature is preserved by allowing a shared semantics to naturally emerge from peer interactions. Copyright 2007 VLDB Endowment.
Emergent semantics and cooperation in multi-knowledge environments : the ESTEEM architecture / C. Aiello, R. Baldoni, D. Bianchini, C. Bolchini, S. Bonomi, S. Castano, T. Catarci, C.A. Curino, V. De Antonellis, A. Ferrara, M. Melchiori, D. Milano, S. Montanelli, G. Orsi, A. Poggi, L. Querzoni, E. Quintarelli, R. Rossato, D. Salvi, M. Scannapieco, F.A. Schreiber, L. Tanca, S. Tucci Pergiovanni - In: 33rd International conference on very large data bases : University of Vienna, Austria, september 23-27 2007 : conference proceedings / [a cura di] Christoph Koch ... [et al]. - New York : Association for computing machinery, 2007. - ISBN 9781595936493. (( Intervento presentato al 33. convegno International Workshop on Semantic Data and Service Integration tenutosi a Wien nel 2007.
Emergent semantics and cooperation in multi-knowledge environments : the ESTEEM architecture
S. Castano;A. Ferrara;S. Montanelli;
2007
Abstract
In the present global society, information has to be exchangeable in open and dynamic environments, where interacting peers do not necessarily share a common understanding of the world at hand, and do not have a complete picture of the context where the interaction occurs. In this paper, we present the Esteem approach and the related peer architecture for emergent semantics in dynamic and multi-knowledge environments. In Esteem, semantic communities are built around declared interests in the form of manifesto ontologies, and their autonomous nature is preserved by allowing a shared semantics to naturally emerge from peer interactions. Copyright 2007 VLDB Endowment.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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