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  • Book
  • © 2007

Ontology Matching

  • First state-of-the-art overview of techniques applicable to database schema matching and semantic web applications
  • Summarizes research from database, information systems, and artificial intelligence communities
  • Uniquely combines theoretical foundations with practical application perspectives
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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Table of contents (12 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages I-IX
  2. Introduction

    1. Introduction

      Pages 1-6
  3. The matching problem

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 7-7
    2. Applications

      Pages 9-27
    3. The matching problem

      Pages 29-57
  4. Ontology matching techniques

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 59-59
    2. Basic techniques

      Pages 73-116
    3. Matching strategies

      Pages 117-150
  5. Systems and evaluation

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 151-151
  6. Representing, explaining, and processing alignments

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 217-217
    2. Explaining alignments

      Pages 245-258
    3. Processing alignments

      Pages 259-265
  7. Conclusions

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 267-267
    2. Conclusions

      Pages 269-274
  8. Back Matter

    Pages 275-333

About this book

Ontologies tend to be found everywhere. They are viewed as the silver bullet for many applications, such as database integration, peer-to-peer systems, e-commerce, semantic web services, or social networks. However, in open or evolving systems, such as the semantic web, different parties would, in general, adopt different ontologies. Thus, merely using ontologies, like using XML, does not reduce heterogeneity: it just raises heterogeneity problems to a higher level.

Euzenat and Shvaiko’s book is devoted to ontology matching as a solution to the semantic heterogeneity problem faced by computer systems. Ontology matching aims at finding correspondences between semantically related entities of different ontologies. These correspondences may stand for equivalence as well as other relations, such as consequence, subsumption, or disjointness, between ontology entities. Many different matching solutions have been proposed so far from various viewpoints, e.g., databases, information systems, artificial intelligence.

With Ontology Matching, researchers and practitioners will find a reference book which presents currently available work in a uniform framework. In particular, the work and the techniques presented in this book can equally be applied to database schema matching, catalog integration, XML schema matching and other related problems. The objectives of the book include presenting (i) the state of the art and (ii) the latest research results in ontology matching by providing a detailed account of matching techniques and matching systems in a systematic way from theoretical, practical and application perspectives.

Authors and Affiliations

  • INRIA Rhône-Alpes, Saint-Ismier cedex, France

    Jérôme Euzenat

  • Department of Information and Communication Technology, University of Trento, Povo, Trento (TN), Italy

    Pavel Shvaiko

About the authors

Jérôme Euzenat is senior research scientist at INRIA where he leads the Exmo team dedicated to computer-mediated exchanges of structured knowledge. He is supervising the "Heterogeneity" work package of the Knowledge web network of excellence which aims at structuring the European research community in ontology alignment and merging.

Pavel Shvaiko is a postdoc fellow at the Department of Information and Communication Technology (DIT) of the University of Trento (UniTn), Trento, Italy. In 2006, he finished his PhD on "Iterative Schema-based Semantic Matching". Currently, he works in a European research project on matching multiple schemas, classifications, ontologies as a solution to the semantic heterogeneity problem.

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 74.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access