00549nas a2200133 4500008004100000245008000041210006900121100002000190700001800210700002400228700002500252700002400277856011400301 2017 eng d00aTowards a simple but useful ontology design pattern representation language0 aTowards a simple but useful ontology design pattern representati1 aHitzler, Pascal1 aGangemi, Aldo1 aJanowicz, Krzysztof1 aKrisnadhi, Adila, A.1 aPresutti, Valentina uhttps://daselab.cs.ksu.edu/publications/towards-simple-useful-ontology-design-pattern-representation-language00523nas a2200145 4500008004100000245005700041210005600098260002500154100002400179700001800203700002000221700002100241700002400262856009100286 2016 eng d00aIntroduction: Ontology Design Patterns in a Nutshell0 aIntroduction Ontology Design Patterns in a Nutshell aAmsterdambIOS Press1 aJanowicz, Krzysztof1 aGangemi, Aldo1 aHitzler, Pascal1 aKrisnadhi, Adila1 aPresutti, Valentina uhttps://daselab.cs.ksu.edu/publications/introduction-ontology-design-patterns-nutshell00612nam a2200157 4500008004100000245008500041210006900126260002500195490000800220100002000228700001800248700002400266700002100290700002400311856011900335 2016 eng d00aOntology Engineering with Ontology Design Patterns: Foundations and Applications0 aOntology Engineering with Ontology Design Patterns Foundations a aAmsterdambIOS Press0 v0251 aHitzler, Pascal1 aGangemi, Aldo1 aJanowicz, Krzysztof1 aKrisnadhi, Adila1 aPresutti, Valentina uhttps://daselab.cs.ksu.edu/publications/ontology-engineering-ontology-design-patterns-foundations-and-applications00857nas a2200253 4500008004100000245009600041210006900137260001300206300001400219490000900233100002200242700002000264700001700284700002000301700002000321700002000341700002400361700002100385700001900406700002100425700001900446700001700465856012100482 2014 eng d00aHow to Best Find a Partner? An Evaluation of Editing Approaches to Construct R2RML Mappings0 aHow to Best Find a Partner An Evaluation of Editing Approaches t bSpringer a675–6900 v84651 aPinkel, Christoph1 aBinnig, Carsten1 aHaase, Peter1 aMartin, Clemens1 aSengupta, Kunal1 aTrame, Johannes1 aPresutti, Valentina1 ad'Amato, Claudia1 aGandon, Fabien1 ad'Aquin, Mathieu1 aStaab, Steffen1 aTordai, Anna uhttps://daselab.cs.ksu.edu/publications/how-best-find-partner-evaluation-editing-approaches-construct-r2rml-mappings01810nas a2200289 4500008004100000245006000041210005700101260001300158300001200171490000900183520099400192653001601186653002901202653000801231100001801239700002001257700002401277700002201301700002101323700002001344700002101364700001901385700002401404700001901428700002301447856005001470 2013 eng d00aAn Ontology Design Pattern for Cartographic Map Scaling0 aOntology Design Pattern for Cartographic Map Scaling bSpringer a76–930 v78823 a
The concepts of scale is at the core of cartographic abstraction and mapping. It defines which geographic phenomena should be displayed, which type of geometry and map symbol to use, which measures can be taken, as well as the degree to which features need to be exaggerated or spatially displaced. In this work, we present an ontology design pattern for map scaling using the Web Ontology Language (OWL) within a particular extension of the OWL RL profile. We explain how it can be used to describe scaling applications, to reason over scale levels, and geometric representations. We propose an axiomatization that allows us to impose meaningful constraints on the pattern, and, thus, to go beyond simple surface semantics. Interestingly, this includes several functional constraints currently not expressible in any of the OWL profiles. We show that for this specific scenario, the addition of such constraints does not increase the reasoning complexity which remains tractable.
10aMap Scaling10aOntology Design Patterns10aOWL1 aCarral, David1 aScheider, Simon1 aJanowicz, Krzysztof1 aVardeman, Charles1 aKrisnadhi, Adila1 aHitzler, Pascal1 aCimiano, Philipp1 aCorcho, Óscar1 aPresutti, Valentina1 aHollink, Laura1 aRudolph, Sebastian uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38288-8_6