TY - JOUR
T1 - A Chinese time ontology for the Semantic Web
AU - Zhang, Chunxia
AU - Cao, Cungen
AU - Sui, Yuefei
AU - Wu, Xindong
PY - 2011/10
Y1 - 2011/10
N2 - Representation of and reasoning with temporal knowledge are fundamental in information systems that involve changes and actions. To build such systems, a time ontology is demanded. The development of a time ontology is also an indispensable part of effort to realize the Semantic Web. Nevertheless, our practice shows that any practical time ontology is closely related with a specific calendar, culture or history. To this end, this paper presents a Chinese time ontology for knowledge systems and web services which involve temporal entities or temporal properties. First, we define a base time ontology. As a core component, it consists of a time system, a timing system, a Gregorian timing system, and a timing ontology. Upon this base ontology, other parts of the Chinese time ontology are finally constructed, including the traditional Chinese timing system, temporal representation in Chinese idiosyncratic ways, and transformation between temporal entities in the Gregorian timing system and temporal entities in the traditional Chinese timing system. We will argue that the base time ontology is not only a basic and integral part of the Chinese time ontology, but also a base for constructing other time ontologies.
AB - Representation of and reasoning with temporal knowledge are fundamental in information systems that involve changes and actions. To build such systems, a time ontology is demanded. The development of a time ontology is also an indispensable part of effort to realize the Semantic Web. Nevertheless, our practice shows that any practical time ontology is closely related with a specific calendar, culture or history. To this end, this paper presents a Chinese time ontology for knowledge systems and web services which involve temporal entities or temporal properties. First, we define a base time ontology. As a core component, it consists of a time system, a timing system, a Gregorian timing system, and a timing ontology. Upon this base ontology, other parts of the Chinese time ontology are finally constructed, including the traditional Chinese timing system, temporal representation in Chinese idiosyncratic ways, and transformation between temporal entities in the Gregorian timing system and temporal entities in the traditional Chinese timing system. We will argue that the base time ontology is not only a basic and integral part of the Chinese time ontology, but also a base for constructing other time ontologies.
KW - Chinese time ontology
KW - Semantic Web
KW - Temporal entities
KW - Temporal representation
KW - Time ontology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79959760779&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.knosys.2011.04.021
DO - 10.1016/j.knosys.2011.04.021
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:79959760779
SN - 0950-7051
VL - 24
SP - 1057
EP - 1074
JO - Knowledge-Based Systems
JF - Knowledge-Based Systems
IS - 7
ER -