In computer science, ontologies are dynamic entities: to adapt them to new and evolving applications, it is necessary to frequently perform modifications such as the extension with new axioms and merging with other ontologies. We argue that, after performing such modifications, it is important to know whether the resulting ontology is a conservative extension of the original one. If this is not the case, then there may be unexpected consequences when using the modified ontology in place of the original one in applications. In this paper, we propose and investigate new reasoning problems based on the notion of conservative extension, assuming that ontologies are formulated as TBoxes in the description logic ALC. We show that the fundamental such reasoning problems are decidable and 2EXPTIME-complete. Additionally, we perform a finer-grained analysis that distinguishes between the size of the original ontology and the size of the additional axioms. In particular, we show that there are algorithms whose runtime is ‘only’ exponential in the size of the original ontology, but double exponential in the size of the added axioms. If the size of the new axioms is small compared to the size of the ontology, these algorithms are thus not significantly more complex than the standard reasoning services implemented in modern description logic reasoners. If the extension of an ontology is not conservative, our algorithm is capable of computing a concept that witnesses non-conservativeness. We show that the computed concepts are of (worst-case) minimal size.

Did I damage my Ontology ? / S. Ghilardi, C. Lutz, F. Wolter - In: KR Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning : [held in the Lake District of the United Kingdom, June 2-5, 2006] / edited by Patrick Doherty, John Mylopoulos, and Christopher Welty / [a cura di] Patrick Doherty, John Mylopoulos, Christopher Welty. - Menlo Park, Calif. : AAAI Press, 2006. - ISBN 978-1-57735-271-6. - pp. 187-197 (( Intervento presentato al 10. convegno International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning tenutosi a Lake District of the UK nel 2006.

Did I damage my Ontology ?

S. Ghilardi
Primo
;
2006

Abstract

In computer science, ontologies are dynamic entities: to adapt them to new and evolving applications, it is necessary to frequently perform modifications such as the extension with new axioms and merging with other ontologies. We argue that, after performing such modifications, it is important to know whether the resulting ontology is a conservative extension of the original one. If this is not the case, then there may be unexpected consequences when using the modified ontology in place of the original one in applications. In this paper, we propose and investigate new reasoning problems based on the notion of conservative extension, assuming that ontologies are formulated as TBoxes in the description logic ALC. We show that the fundamental such reasoning problems are decidable and 2EXPTIME-complete. Additionally, we perform a finer-grained analysis that distinguishes between the size of the original ontology and the size of the additional axioms. In particular, we show that there are algorithms whose runtime is ‘only’ exponential in the size of the original ontology, but double exponential in the size of the added axioms. If the size of the new axioms is small compared to the size of the ontology, these algorithms are thus not significantly more complex than the standard reasoning services implemented in modern description logic reasoners. If the extension of an ontology is not conservative, our algorithm is capable of computing a concept that witnesses non-conservativeness. We show that the computed concepts are of (worst-case) minimal size.
description logics ; conservativity
Settore M-FIL/02 - Logica e Filosofia della Scienza
2006
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/23850
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