Abstract. Belief function theory provides a flexible way to combine information provided by different sources. This combination is usually followed by a decision making which can be handled by a range of decision rules. Some rules help to choose the most likely hypothesis. Others allow that a decision is made on a set of hypotheses. In [6], we proposed a decision rule based on a distance measure. First, in this paper, we aim to demonstrate that our proposed decision rule is a particular case of the rule proposed in [4]. Second, we give experiments showing that our rule is able to decide on a set of hypotheses. Some experiments are handled on a set of mass functions generated randomly, others on real databases.
Considering the high heterogeneity of the ontologies pub-lished on the web,
ontology matching is a crucial issue whose aim is to establish links between an
entity of a source ontology and one or several entities from a target ontology.
Perfectible similarity measures, consid-ered as sources of information, are
combined to establish these links. The theory of belief functions is a powerful
mathematical tool for combining such uncertain information. In this paper, we
introduce a decision pro-cess based on a distance measure to identify the best
possible matching entities for a given source entity
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