Linguistically Grounded Ontology
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A linguistically grounded ontology is an ontology whose concepts and relations are linked to concept mentions and relation mentions.
- Context:
- It can range from being a Linguistically Grounded Ontology Top-Level Ontology.
- It can be created by a Concept Mention Linking Task.
- It can be created by a Relation Mention Linking Task.
- Example(s):
- kddo1 Ontology.
- a Lexicalized Ontology, such as SUMO (which is grounded to WordNet).
- See: Ontology Engineering Task.
References
2010
- (Melli, 2010a) ⇒ Gabor Melli. (2010). “Concept Mentions within KDD-2009 Abstracts (kdd09cma1) Linked to a KDD Ontology (kddo1).” In: Proceedings of the Seventh conference on International Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2010).
- (Huang et al., 2010) ⇒ Chu-ren Huang (editor), Nicoletta Calzolari (editor), Aldo Gangemi (editor), Alessandro Lenci (editor), Alessandro Oltramari (editor), Laurent Prevot (editor). (2010). “Ontology and the Lexicon: A Natural Language Processing Perspective.” Cambridge University Press. ISBN:9780521886598
2009
- (Buitelaar et al., 2009) ⇒ Paul Buitelaar, Philipp Cimiano, Peter Haase, and Michael Sintek (2009). “Towards Linguistically Grounded Ontologies.” In: Proceedings of the 6th European Semantic Web Conference (ESWC 2009). doi:10.1007/978-3-642-02121-3_12
2005
- (Amardeilh et al., 2005) ⇒ Florence Amardeilh, Philippe Laublet, and Jean-Luc Minel. (2005). “Document Annotation and Ontology Population from Linguistic Extractions.” In: Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Knowledge Capture (K-CAP 2005). doi:10.1145/1088622.1088651
2004
- (Hirst, 2004) ⇒ Graeme Hirst. (2004). “Ontology and the Lexicon.” In: Steffen Staab, Rudi Studer (Eds.). “Handbook on Ontologies.” Springer. ISBN:3-540-40834-7
2002
- (Vargas-Vera et al., 2002) ⇒ Maria Vargas-Vera, Enrico Motta, John Domingue, Mattia Lanzoni, Arthur Stutt, and Fabio Ciravegna. (2002). “MnM: Ontology Driven Tool for Semantic Markup.” In: Proceedings of the Workshop Semantic Authoring, Annotation & Knowledge Markup (SAAKM 2002). doi:10.1007/3-540-45810-7_34
- (Farrar et al., 2002) ⇒ Scott Farrar, William D. Lewis, and D. Terence Langendoen. (2002). “A Common Ontology for Linguistic Concepts.” In: Proceedings of the Knowledge Technologies Conference.
- QUOTE: we built the linguistic ontologyon top of the Standard Upper Merged Ontology (SUMO).