Abstract

Background

The ontology authoring step in ontology development involves having to make choices about what subject domain knowledge to include. This may concern sorting out ontological differences and making choices between conflicting axioms due to limitations in the logic or the subject domain semantics. Examples are dealing with different foundational ontologies in ontology alignment and OWL 2 DL’s transitive object property versus a qualified cardinality constraint. Such conflicts have to be resolved somehow. However, only isolated and fragmented guidance for doing so is available, which therefore results in ad hoc decision-making that may not be the best choice or forgotten about later.

Results

This work aims to address this by taking steps towards a framework to deal with the various types of modeling conflicts through meaning negotiation and conflict resolution in a systematic way. It proposes an initial library of common conflicts, a conflict set, typical steps toward resolution, and the software availability and requirements needed for it. The approach was evaluated with an actual case of domain knowledge usage in the context of epizootic disease outbreak, being avian influenza, and running examples with COVID-19 ontologies.

Conclusions

The evaluation demonstrated the potential and feasibility of a conflict resolution framework for ontologies.

Details

Title
Toward a systematic conflict resolution framework for ontologies
Author
Keet, C Maria; Grütter, Rolf  VIAFID ORCID Logo 
Pages
1-15
Section
Research
Publication year
2021
Publication date
2021
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
20411480
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2562518362
Copyright
© 2021. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.