TY - BOOK ID - 32841870 TI - Measuring and Analysing the Use of Ontologies : A Semantic Framework for Measuring Ontology Usage AU - Ashraf, Jamshaid. AU - Hussain, Omar K. AU - Hussain, Farookh Khadeer. AU - Chang, Elizabeth J. PY - 2018 SN - 3319756818 3319756796 PB - Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Engineering. KW - Artificial intelligence. KW - Computational intelligence. KW - Computational Intelligence. KW - Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics). KW - Intelligence, Computational KW - Artificial intelligence KW - Soft computing KW - AI (Artificial intelligence) KW - Artificial thinking KW - Electronic brains KW - Intellectronics KW - Intelligence, Artificial KW - Intelligent machines KW - Machine intelligence KW - Thinking, Artificial KW - Bionics KW - Cognitive science KW - Digital computer simulation KW - Electronic data processing KW - Logic machines KW - Machine theory KW - Self-organizing systems KW - Simulation methods KW - Fifth generation computers KW - Neural computers KW - Construction KW - Industrial arts KW - Technology KW - Artificial Intelligence. KW - Intel·ligència artificial. KW - Web semàntica KW - Ontologies (Informàtica) KW - Investigació. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:32841870 AB - This unique book succinctly summarizes the need to measure how ontologies (one of the building blocks of the Semantic Web) are currently being utilized, providing insights for various stakeholders. Where possible it improves and reuses terms in existing vocabularies/ontologies, as recommended by the Linked Data community. Recent advances in the Semantic Web have led to a proliferation of Resource Description Framework (RDF) data, which employ ontologies to semantically describe the information on the Web making it equally understandable for both humans and machines. However, to create a network effect, it is important that selective ontologies are used by more data publishers to improve the value of that ontology. For this to happen, it is vital to discover what is being used from an ontology to semantically annotate the information on the Web specific to a given domain. Answers to such basic but crucial questions can only be achieved by ascertaining how ontologies in the current semantic web are being utilized and adopted. The proposed frameworks to obtain such insights are explained with real-world examples to provide a clear and detailed description of ontology usage analysis. Both theoretical and practical, the book is of value to academics and professionals working in industry. Specifically, it is of primary interest to researchers, graduate students and practitioners in the area of the Semantic Web and its various real-world applications. ER -