2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.websem.2011.11.008
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Higher-order aspects and context in SUMO

Abstract: This article addresses the automation of higher-order aspects in expressive ontologies such as the Suggested Upper Merged Ontology SUMO. Evidence is provided that modern higher-order automated theorem provers like LEO-II can be fruitfully employed for the task. A particular focus is on embedded formulas (formulas as terms), which are used in SUMO, for example, for modeling temporal, epistemic, or doxastic contexts. This modeling is partly in conflict with SUMO's assumption of a bivalent, classical semantics an… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(87 reference statements)
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“…[35,36] and the references therein), and on their applications in mathe-matics, artificial intelligence and education (e.g. [37,38,39]). These research activities inspired first experiments towards the development of a universal (meta-) logical reasoning framework based on the SSE approach [40,41,30,11].…”
Section: Objectives Of the Compmeta Project And Preliminary Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[35,36] and the references therein), and on their applications in mathe-matics, artificial intelligence and education (e.g. [37,38,39]). These research activities inspired first experiments towards the development of a universal (meta-) logical reasoning framework based on the SSE approach [40,41,30,11].…”
Section: Objectives Of the Compmeta Project And Preliminary Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large number of ontologies has already been developed to describe general concepts appearing in different fields of human activity. Suggested Upper Merged Ontology (SUMO) [10] and Sowa may serve as examples of such ontologies.…”
Section: Ontologies As Application Domain Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of this, we use the super sense for the associated noun sense using the derivationally related form relation for adjectives and the pertainym (adverb to adjective) and derivationally related form (adjective to noun) relations for adverbs. The final feature is the SUMO concepts (Benzmüller and Pease, 2012) associated with all WordNet senses in the occasion. Examples of errors in type assignment are shown in Figure 4.…”
Section: Automatically Categorizing Occasionsmentioning
confidence: 99%