Title : Knowledge Engineering rediscovered: Towards Reasoning Patterns for the Semantic Web

Presenter Annette ten Teije
Abstract The extensive work on Knowledge Engineering in the 1990s has resulted in a systematic analysis of task-types, and the corresponding problem solving methods that can be deployed for different types of tasks. That anal- ysis was the basis for a sound and widely accepted methodology for building knowledge-based systems, and has made it is possible to build libraries of reusable models, methods and code. In this paper, we make a first attempt at a similar anal- ysis for Semantic Web applications. We will show that it possible to identify a relatively small number of task-types, and that, somewhat surprisingly, a large set of Semantic Web applications can be described in this typology. Secondly, we show that it is possible to decompose these task-types into a small number of primitive (“atomic”) inference steps. We give semi-formal definitions for both the task-types and the primitive inference steps that we identify. We substantiate our claim that our task-types are sufficient to cover the vast majority of Semantic Web applications by showing that all entries of the Semantic Web Challenges of the last 3 years can be classified in these task-types.

Title : The OKKAM project -current status

Presenter Stefano Bocconi
Abstract I will present the development of the project which has entered the last year of activity, both from the scientific point of view (issues around creating the infrastructure) and the point of view of the business partners. The latter are the Italian news agency (ANSA) and a very famous scientific publisher (Elsevier).