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Applying the realism-based ontology-versioning method for tracking changes in the basic formal ontology

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Changes in an upper level ontology have obvious consequences for the domain ontologies that use it at lower levels. It is therefore crucial to document the changes made between successive versions of ontologies of this kind. We describe and apply a method for tracking, explaining and measuring changes between successive versions of upper level ontologies such as the Basic Formal Ontology (BFO). The proposed change-tracking method extends earlier work on Realism-Based Ontology Versioning (RBOV) and Evolutionary Terminology Auditing (ETA). We describe here the application of this evaluation method to changes between BFO 1.0, BFO 1.1, and BFO 2.0. We discuss the issues raised by this application and describe the extensions which we added to the original evaluation schema in order to account for changes in this type of ontology. The results of our study show that BFO has undergone eight types of changes that can be systematically explained by the extended evaluation schema. Finally, we discuss problematic cases, possible pitfalls and certain limits of our study that we propose to address in future work.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationFormal Ontology in Information Systems - Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference (FOIS 2014)
EditorsPawel Garbacz, Oliver Kutz
PublisherIOS Press BV
Pages227-240
Number of pages14
ISBN (Electronic)9781614994374
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

Publication series

NameFrontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications
Volume267

Keywords

  • Ontology versioning
  • change tracking
  • evaluation metrics
  • quality assessment
  • realist ontology
  • upper-level ontologies

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