Filtern
Schlagworte
- ontology (4)
- Ontology (2)
- mobile phone (2)
- Context-aware processes (1)
- Description Logic (1)
- Discussion Forums (1)
- Distributed process execution (1)
- Dokumentation (1)
- Entscheidungsprozess (1)
- Generative Model (1)
- MPEG-7 (1)
- Model-Driven Engineering (1)
- OWL (1)
- Online Community (1)
- POIs (1)
- Process tracing (1)
- RDF Graphs (1)
- RDF modeling (1)
- Resource Description Framework (RDF) (1)
- SPARQL (1)
- Semantic Web (1)
- Semantics (1)
- Unified Modeling Language (UML ) (1)
- Web Ontology Language (OWL) (1)
- application programming interfaces (1)
- business process management (1)
- core ontologies (1)
- event model (1)
- event-based systems (1)
- events (1)
- gaze information (1)
- image semantics (1)
- knowledge work (1)
- mobile application (1)
- mobile facets (1)
- mobile interaction (1)
- personal information management (1)
- persönliches Informationsmanagement (1)
- points of interest (1)
- semantic desktop (1)
- semantics (1)
- semantischer Desktop (1)
- social media (1)
- summative evaluation (1)
- tagging (1)
- visualization (1)
Institut
The lack of a formal event model hinders interoperability in distributed event-based systems. Consequently, we present in this paper a formal model of events, called F. The model bases on an upper-level ontology and pro-vides comprehensive support for all aspects of events such as time and space, objects and persons involved, as well as the structural aspects, namely mereological, causal, and correlational relationships. The event model provides a flexible means for event composition, modeling of event causality and correlation, and allows for representing different interpretations of the same event. The foundational event model F is developed in a pattern-oriented approach, modularized in different ontologies, and can be easily extended by domain specifific ontologies.