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www.neon-project.org
Welcome to NeOn!
Wednesday, 24 May 2006 23:39
NeOn is a 14.7 million Euros project involving 14 European partners and co-funded by the European Commission’s Sixth Framework Programme under grant number IST-2005-027595. NeOn started in March 2006 and has a duration of 4 years. Our aim is to advance the state of the art in using ontologies for large-scale semantic applications in the distributed organizations. Particularly, we aim at improving the capability to handle multiple networked ontologies that exist in a particular context, are created collaboratively, and might be highly dynamic and constantly evolving.

The first release of the NeOn Toolkit, one of the core outcomes of the NeOn project, is available for download and testing from the NeOn Toolkit & Community site.




Latest News from NeOn
 
NeOn Sponsors PhD Symposium at ESWC'09
Friday, 29 May 2009 08:54

Continuing its tradition in supporting PhD students, the NeOn project is the main sponsor of this year's ESWC PhD Symposium to be held in Crete, on the 1st of June. While PhD symposia have been held in conjunction with ESWC for a few years, this year full papers will be published in the main conference proceedings. As a result, the symposium attracted a lot of interest, which materialized in a record number of 31 submissions. Out of these, the organizers have selected 8 full-papers and 8 posters.

Besides the financial support, this event has benefited from the voluntary work of NeOn members. The symposium is co-organized by former NeOn member Marta Sabou and will benefit from the participation of NeOn members Mathieu d'Aquin and Jerome Euzenat, who will act as mentors during the event. It is our pleasure to announce that two PhD students funded by NeOn, Carlo Alloca and Fouad Zablith, will present their work during the symposium.

Story by: Marta Sabou

Related Links

ESWC 2009 Website

PhD Symposium Web Page 

 
NeOn at the MUSING Executive Workshop
Friday, 23 May 2008 02:26
On 21 May 2008 NeOn was invited to provide guidance on next-generation ontology engineering and knowledge modelling at the MUSING Executive Workshop. The workshop took place at the London School of Economics in the inspiring neighbourhood of the Tate Modern Gallery and the Shakespeare's Globe Theatre on the Bankside and was organized by the Consortium of the fellow-FP6 integrated project MUSING. The main theme of the workshop was centred on turning data into risk knowledge. A range of statistical and knowledge-based techniques were suggested by the presenters, and NeOn was invited to provide a summary of state-of-the-art techniques and methods for engineering advanced ontologies.
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Announcing the NeOn Book
Monday, 01 February 2010 17:15

A main objective of the NeOn project was to create a methodology for building ontology networks that provided guidance on all the key aspects of the ontology engineering process, including collaborative ontology development, the reuse of ontological and non-ontological resources, and the evolution and maintenance of networked ontologies. The methodology developed to fulfil this purpose is called NeOn Methodology and is one of the core outcomes of the NeOn project.

As this 4-year project draws to a close, we are in the process of writing a book that will explain the NeOn Methodology Framework and cover the main processes and activities presented in the methodology. The book entitled “NeOn Methodology for Building Ontology Networks” is designed as a reference book for ontology practitioners.

There are 4 main sections, which are divided into chapters:

Section 1 contains the NeOn Methodology Framework for building ontology networks. Here we explain the set of scenarios for developing ontology networks, the glossary of processes and activities involved in the development of ontologies, the collection of ontology life cycle models, and provide a general description of the methodological guidelines.

Section 2 is devoted to the set of prescriptive methodological guidelines for key processes and activities in the ontology network development. Each methodological guideline is presented in a chapter.

Section 3 is concerned with the technological support for developing ontology networks, that is, the NeOn Toolkit. This toolkit provides several plug-ins to support specifically the various processes and activities that characterise the ontology network development.

Finally, in Section 4 we provide the reader with examples of how the NeOn Methodology has been applied in three different domains: fisheries, invoices, and nomenclature.

The Table of contents, as well as a short summary of the different book chapters, are now available on the NeOn website.

Links:

The NeOn Methodology in a Nutshell

 
Collaboration between NeOn and MUSING on Linguistic Patterns
Monday, 18 May 2009 08:14

In February 2009, a collaboration was initiated between UPM partners working in NeOn and DFKI researchers working in the European Project MUSING (FP6-027097). Their common interest lies in the identification of linguistic structures or patterns that convey information about ontologically related concepts.

Within the NeOn project, researchers at UPM are working on the identification of the so-called Lexico-Syntactic Patterns (LSPs) that have a correspondence to Ontology Design Patterns (ODPs). LSPs are defined as linguistic patterns at the sentence level in which verbs are the elements that mainly convey the semantics of the relation. The main purpose of this research is to allow novice users the formulation of the modelling problems they may have during the ontology development process in Natural Language (NL). In this way, thanks to the repository of LSPs associated to ODPs and included in the ODPs library, it is possible to identify the ODPs that solve users modelling needs originally expressed in NL. The repository of LSPs is aimed to be multilingual, including LSPs for English, German and Spanish.

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