The Web and its Semantic extension (i.e. Linked Open Data) contain open global-scale knowledge and make it available to potentially intelligent machines that want to benefit from it. Nevertheless, most of Linked Open Data lack ontological distinctions and have sparse axiomatisation. For example, distinctions such as whether an entity is inherently a class or an individual, or whether it is a physical object or not, are hardly expressed in the data, although they have been largely studied and formalised by foundational ontologies (e.g. DOLCE, SUMO). These distinctions belong to common sense too, which is relevant for many artificial intelligence tasks such as natural language understanding, scene recognition, and the like. There is a gap bet...
Although the Semantic Web was originally designed as a "web for machines", the growing wealth of inf...
Abstract. “The term ‘Linked Data ’ refers to a set of best practices for publishing and connecting s...
The idea of publishing structured and linked data on the Web started in the early stages of the Worl...
The Web and its Semantic extension (i.e. Linked Open Data) contain open global-scale knowledge and m...
Linked Open Data (LOD) is the publicly available RDF data in the Web. Each LOD entity is identfied b...
Linked Open Data (LOD) is the publicly available RDF data in the Web. Each LOD entity is identfied b...
This paper discusses some of the methodological issues one encounters when creating and using ontolo...
This article considers linked data, starting with the four rules drawn up in 2006 by the inventor of...
Abstract. Today’s most popular means for publishing semantic information on the web is the paradigm ...
Linked Open Data (LOD) is the largest, collaborative, distributed, and publicly-accessible Knowledge...
Web 2.0 has changed the way we share and keep up with information. We communicate through social med...
In this position paper, we argue that the Linked Open Data (LoD) Cloud, in its current form, is only...
Linked Open Data promises to provide guiding principles to publish interlinked knowledge graphs on t...
Although the Semantic Web was originally designed as a "web for machines", the growing wealth of inf...
Abstract. “The term ‘Linked Data ’ refers to a set of best practices for publishing and connecting s...
The idea of publishing structured and linked data on the Web started in the early stages of the Worl...
The Web and its Semantic extension (i.e. Linked Open Data) contain open global-scale knowledge and m...
Linked Open Data (LOD) is the publicly available RDF data in the Web. Each LOD entity is identfied b...
Linked Open Data (LOD) is the publicly available RDF data in the Web. Each LOD entity is identfied b...
This paper discusses some of the methodological issues one encounters when creating and using ontolo...
This article considers linked data, starting with the four rules drawn up in 2006 by the inventor of...
Abstract. Today’s most popular means for publishing semantic information on the web is the paradigm ...
Linked Open Data (LOD) is the largest, collaborative, distributed, and publicly-accessible Knowledge...
Web 2.0 has changed the way we share and keep up with information. We communicate through social med...
In this position paper, we argue that the Linked Open Data (LoD) Cloud, in its current form, is only...
Linked Open Data promises to provide guiding principles to publish interlinked knowledge graphs on t...
Although the Semantic Web was originally designed as a "web for machines", the growing wealth of inf...
Abstract. “The term ‘Linked Data ’ refers to a set of best practices for publishing and connecting s...
The idea of publishing structured and linked data on the Web started in the early stages of the Worl...