Policies for Public Domain Ontologies for the Intelligence Community

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Citation: Elisa F. Kendall and Jay Jacobs and Deborah L. McGuinness and Stephen Schwab. (2007) Policies for Public Domain Ontologies for the Intelligence Community. In Proceedings of the Ontology for the Intelligence Community Conference, November,2007.

Publication inproceedings ( Edit )
type InProceedings
bibtype inproceedings
Bibtex basics
author Elisa F. Kendall and Jay Jacobs and Deborah L. McGuinness and Stephen Schwab
title Policies for Public Domain Ontologies for the Intelligence Community
booktitle Proceedings of the Ontology for the Intelligence Community Conference
address Columbia, Maryland
year 2007
month November
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abstract Numerous RDF vocabularies and OWL, KIF, and other knowledge representation language ontologies have been contributed to the growing body of ontologies available in the public domain over the last ten years. Many of these were created with government-funded research support in the US and EU. Only a small subset is reusable, and fewer are appropriate for use in applications supporting evolving Intelligence Community requirements. This is partly due to decreasing funding available in the US in particular, but also because of lack of well-specified policies for vocabulary management, metadata, and provenance specification. In this paper we will highlight some of the challenges we have faced in developing and attempting to reuse ontologies in support of DARPA and US Department of Defense initiatives, and provide fodder for discussion of requirements for public domain ontologies.

KSL Technical Report ID: KSL-07-08
Facts about Policies for Public Domain Ontologies for the Intelligence CommunityRDF feed
Abstract Numerous RDF vocabularies and OWL, KIF, an Numerous RDF vocabularies and OWL, KIF, and other knowledge representation language ontologies have been contributed to the growing body of ontologies available in the public domain over the last ten years. Many of these were created with government-funded research support in the US and EU. Only a small subset is reusable, and fewer are appropriate for use in applications supporting evolving Intelligence Community requirements. This is partly due to decreasing funding available in the US in particular, but also because of lack of well-specified policies for vocabulary management, metadata, and provenance specification. In this paper we will highlight some of the challenges we have faced in developing and attempting to reuse ontologies in support of DARPA and US Department of Defense initiatives, and provide fodder for discussion of requirements for public domain ontologies. requirements for public domain ontologies.
Address Columbia, Maryland  +
Author Elisa F. Kendall and Jay Jacobs and Deborah L. McGuinness and Stephen Schwab  +
Bibtype inproceedings  +
Booktitle Proceedings of the Ontology for the Intelligence Community Conference  +
Has author Elisa F. Kendall and Jay Jacobs and Deborah L. McGuinness and Stephen Schwab  +
Has identifier KSL-07-08  +
Has publishing details November,2007  +
Has title Policies for Public Domain Ontologies for the Intelligence Community  +
Has where published Proceedings of the Ontology for the Intelligence Community Conference  +
Has year 2007  +
Ksl tr id KSL-07-08  +
Month November  +
Process note NO  +
Title Policies for Public Domain Ontologies for the Intelligence Community  +
Year 2007  +
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