Common Sense Ontology
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A Common Sense Ontology is an ontology that is a common sense knowledge base (with common sense assertions).
- Example(s):
- Cyc Ontology,
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Cyc Ontology, Domain-Specific Ontology, Top-Level Ontology.
References
2005
- (Ramachandran et al., 2005) ⇒ Deepak Ramachandran, Pace Reagan, and Keith Goolsbey. (2005). “First-orderized Researchcyc: Expressivity and Efficiency in a Common-sense Ontology.” In: AAAI Workshop on Contexts and Ontologies: Theory, Practice and Applications.
1995
- (Dahlgren, 1995) ⇒ Kathleen Dahlgren. (1995). “A Linguistic Ontology.” In: International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 43(5).
- QUOTE: This paper defends the choice of a linguistically-based content ontology for natural language processing and demonstrates that a single common-sense ontology produces plausible interpretations at all levels from parsing through reasoning. The paper explores some of the problems and tradeoffs for a method which has just one content ontology. A linguistically-based content ontology represents the "world view" encoded in natural language.