Database and Expert Systems Applications. 8th International Conference, DEXA '97. Proceedings
DOI: 10.1109/dexa.1997.617411
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KRAFT: knowledge fusion from distributed databases and knowledge bases

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Cited by 42 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…KRAFT (Knowledge Reuse & Fusion/Transformation), [36] was set up by the universities of Aberdeen, Cardiff and Liverpool in collaboration with British Telecom. Its main proposal is to research the possibility of sharing and reusing information contained in databases and heterogeneous knowledge systems.…”
Section: Previous Projects On Information Integration -A Short Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…KRAFT (Knowledge Reuse & Fusion/Transformation), [36] was set up by the universities of Aberdeen, Cardiff and Liverpool in collaboration with British Telecom. Its main proposal is to research the possibility of sharing and reusing information contained in databases and heterogeneous knowledge systems.…”
Section: Previous Projects On Information Integration -A Short Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contemporary environment with open information systems KRAFT is conceived to investigate how existing proposals for distributed information systems architectures can support fusion of knowledge in the form of constraints expressed against an object data model (Gray et al, 1997). The literature on knowledge fusion in the field of computer science has explored the role of KMS in knowledge storage, sharing, reuse, revealing, generation, entry, integration, transportation, search and indexing (Preece et al, 2001;Smimov et al, 2013).…”
Section: Contemporary Research Themesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As well as being an ontology merging tool, IMPS is also a multi-agent implementation making use of networked resources. In Crow (2000), we situate IMPS with respect to other agent architectures for information retrieval and fusion [looking speci"cally at InfoSleuth (Nodine, Fowler & Perry, 1998), RETSINA (Sycara, 1999), SIMS (Knoblock & Ambite, 1997), Ariadne (Knoblock et al, 1998) and KRAFT (Gray et al, 1997)]. Although the aim of these systems may be slightly di!erent from that of IMPS, we hope to "nd areas of consensus in the architectures and interaction mechanisms that are successful in supporting a web-based information agent architecture, and also to examine more sophisticated agent systems to guide the future development of the IMPS agent model.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%