Proceedings of the International Conference on Formal Ontology in Information Systems - Volume 2001 2001
DOI: 10.1145/505168.505180
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Ontological engineering for B2B E-commerce

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Cited by 26 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, Fensel [28] described how ontologies can in principle support the integration of heterogeneous and distributed information in ecommerce, mainly based on catalogs of products, and which tasks are to be mastered. Obrst, Wray and Liu [2] discuss the main challenges of building and aligning ontologies for products and services in B2B e-commerce environments. Corcho and Gómez-Pérez [3] show how multiple standards for classifying products and services can be integrated using ontological mappings, and sketch a prototype implementation based on the WebODE platform.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Similarly, Fensel [28] described how ontologies can in principle support the integration of heterogeneous and distributed information in ecommerce, mainly based on catalogs of products, and which tasks are to be mastered. Obrst, Wray and Liu [2] discuss the main challenges of building and aligning ontologies for products and services in B2B e-commerce environments. Corcho and Gómez-Pérez [3] show how multiple standards for classifying products and services can be integrated using ontological mappings, and sketch a prototype implementation based on the WebODE platform.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[1][2][3]. Surprisingly, nobody has yet tried to exploit this potential and develop the ontologies and infrastructure for real Semantic Web-based e-commerce on a Web scale -compliant with current Semantic Web standards and deployable on available Semantic Web infrastructure.…”
Section: Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A lot of research has been performed to show the potential of using the Semantic Web for improving the search for products on the Web, e.g., [12], [13], and [14]. There exist several general categorization standards for products and services, like UNSPSC, eOTD, eClass, and the Rosettanet Technical Dictionary (RNTD).…”
Section: Products and The Semantic Webmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In [8] the authors list the difficulties of building, maintaining, and integrating product information, and propose that an ontological approach may be the answer. In [25] the authors propose to use cross industry standard classifications such as UNSPSC 1 and eCl@ss 2 as the upper ontology and industry specific classifications as lower ontology. An upper ontology is about concepts that are generic, abstract and, therefore, are general enough to address (at a high level) a broad range of domain areas, while lower ontology contains domain-specific knowledge [35].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%