Abstract:The validation of ontologies, whose aim is to check whether an ontology matches the conceptualization it is meant to specify, is a key activity for guaranteeing the quality of ontologies. This work is focused on the validation through requirements, with the aim of assuring, both the domain experts and ontology developers, that the ontologies they are building or using are complete regarding their needs. Inspired by software engineering testing processes, this work proposes a web-based tool called Themis, indep… Show more
“…In addition, with respect to OEMA it reduced the ontology reuse time and adaptation changes, facilitating the ontology reuse process. As future work, in the DABGEO home page we plan to integrate algorithms that semi-automatically check whether a set of ontologies meet specific requirements [33]. These algorithms would help to reduce the understanding effort that DABGEO requires due to its large number of modules.…”
“…In addition, with respect to OEMA it reduced the ontology reuse time and adaptation changes, facilitating the ontology reuse process. As future work, in the DABGEO home page we plan to integrate algorithms that semi-automatically check whether a set of ontologies meet specific requirements [33]. These algorithms would help to reduce the understanding effort that DABGEO requires due to its large number of modules.…”
“…For example, OntOlogy Pitfall Scanner (OOPS!) [49] to detect the presence of errors which are occurred in design time, Themis [50] to check the validation of requirements, Hermit or Pellet to check the consistency.…”
“…The logs are formatted in HTML in the GUI and markdown in the CLI, which is convenient to create nicelyformatted issues rapidly to collaboratively deal with problems. 16 In addition, a log file in the JUnit report format is generated, which can be used by GitLab to provide an overview of the issues in Merge Requests. 17…”
Section: User Interface Execution Modes Error Reportingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Requirements (requirements.csv file) and tests (tests.csv file) are sent to the Themis service [16] which automatically generates OWL Axioms based on Lexico-Syntactic patterns analysis of the tests, and checks that the ontology contains the generated axioms.…”
Section: Testing Requirement Satisfaction With Themismentioning
The Smart Applications REFerence Ontology (SAREF) defines a modular set of versioned ontologies that enable semantic interoperability between different Internet of Things (IoT) vendor solutions across various IoT industries. The European Telecommunications Standards Institute Specialist Task Force (ETSI STF) 578 recently completed the "Specification of the SAREF Development Framework and Workflow and Development of the SAREF Community Portal for User Engagement". This project specifies the development pipeline and workflow needed to accelerate the development of SAREF and its extensions along with the development of software that automates the generation of ontology portal content from SAREF sources on the public ETSI Forge. This paper describes the SAREF Pipeline that provides an efficient and robust support infrastructure for the Continuous Integration and Delivery of semantic ontology development.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.