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EKAW
2006
Springer

Matching Unstructured Vocabularies Using a Background Ontology

13 years 8 months ago
Matching Unstructured Vocabularies Using a Background Ontology
Existing ontology matching algorithms use a combination of lexical and structural correspondance between source and target ontologies. We present a realistic case-study where both types of overlap are low: matching two unstructured lists of vocabulary used to describe patients at Intensive Care Units in two different hospitals. We show that indeed existing matchers fail on our data. We then discuss the use of background knowledge in ontology matching problems. In particular, we discuss the case where the source and the target ontology are of poor semantics, such as flat lists, and where the background knowledge is of rich semantics, providing extensive descriptions of the properties of the concepts involved. We evaluate our results against a Gold Standard set of matches that we obtained from human experts.
Zharko Aleksovski, Michel C. A. Klein, Warner ten
Added 22 Aug 2010
Updated 22 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where EKAW
Authors Zharko Aleksovski, Michel C. A. Klein, Warner ten Kate, Frank van Harmelen
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