OWL
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Definition
- The OWL Web Ontology Language is intended to be used when the information contained in documents needs to be processed by applications, as opposed to situations where the content only needs to be presented to humans.
- OWL is an XML application, i.e. a vocabulary extension of RDF and it is seen as major element of the semantic web framework.
- “The OWL Web Ontology Language is designed for use by applications that need to process the content of information instead of just presenting information to humans. OWL facilitates greater machine interpretability of Web content than that supported by XML, RDF, and RDF Schema (RDF-S) by providing additional vocabulary along with a formal semantics. Full” (OWL Web Ontology Language Overview, retrieved 13:13, 23 November 2006 (MET))
Sublanguages
OWL has three increasingly-expressive sublanguages: OWL Lite, OWL DL, and OWL.
Software
- ConceptVISTA, An OWL-based formalization of the [[DualPlus Toolkit | DualPLUS learning activities taxonomy], but it also can be used for other ontologies.
- Model Futures OWL Editor (WinXP, Beta, Freeware on 13:13, 23 November 2006 (MET))
OWL in education
Links
- OWL standards documents
- OWL Web Ontology Language Overview, W3C Recommendation 10 February 2004.
- OWL Web Ontology Language Guide, W3C Recommendation 10 February 2004
- OWL Web Ontology Language Semantics and Abstract Syntax, W3C Recommendation 10 February 2004
- Dean M., Schreiber G (Editors); van Harmelen F., Hendler J., Horrocks I., McGuinness D.L., Patel-Schneider P.F., Stein L.A. (Authors), OWL Web Ontology Language Reference, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004. HTML
- Others