Regular Paper
The configuration design ontologies and the VT elevator domain theory

https://doi.org/10.1006/ijhc.1996.0024Get rights and content
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Abstract

In the VT/Sisyphus experiment, a set of problem solving systems were being built against a common specification of a problem. An important hypothesis was that the specification could be given, in large part, as a common ontology. This article is that ontology. This ontology is different than normal software specification documents in two fundamental ways. First, it is formal and machine readable (i.e. in the KIF/Ontolingua syntax). Second, the descriptions of the input and output of the task to be performed include domain knowledge (i.e. about elevator configuration) that characterize semantic constraints on possible solutions, rather than describing the form (data structure) of the answer. The article includes an overview of the conceptualization, excerpts from the machine-readable Ontolingua source files, and pointers to the complete ontology library available on the Internet.

Cited by (0)

f1

Current affiliation: Colloquy Systems. email: gruber @ksl.stanford.edu.

f2

Current affiliation: Enterprise Integration Technologies. email: [email protected].

f3

Current affiliation: Omniview Corporation, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.