On the relationship between ontology construction and natural language: a socio-semiotic view
β Scribed by John A. Bateman
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 615 KB
- Volume
- 43
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1071-5819
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The design and construction of "ontologies" is currently a topic of great interest for diverse groups. Less clear is the extent to which these groups are addressing a common area of concern. By considering the kinds of information and information organizations that are required for adequate accounts of natural language and for sophisticated natural language capabilities in computational systems, this paper distinguishes several different classes of "ontology", each with its own characteristics and principles. A classification for these ontological "realms" is motivated on the basis of systemic-functional semiotics. The resulting stratified "meta-ontology" offers a unifying framework for relating distinct ontological realms while maintaining their individual orientations. In this context, formal ontology can be seen to provide a rather small (although important) component of the overall organization necessary. Claims for the sufficiency of formal ontology in AI and NLP need then to be treated with caution.
(C) 1995 Academic Press Limited
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The concept of conditional independence is considered in the study of the relationship between su ciency and invariance under a Bayesian point of view showing, among other results, that the conditional independence of the almost-invariant -ΓΏeld and a su cient -ΓΏeld given its intersection is equivale