Audi -Using the Ontology o Suppose that an application a is using the second encoding is receiving data from an application B using the first encoding Suppose it encounters SLR Ontology returns SLR is a type of camera Arelation between something it doesn't know (SLR) to something it does know(Camera) 16 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web primer
16 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web Primer Audi – Using the Ontology ⚫ Suppose that an application A – is using the second encoding – is receiving data from an application B using the first encoding ⚫ Suppose it encounters SLR – Ontology returns “SLR is a type of Camera” – A relation between something it doesn’t know (SLR) to something it does know (Camera)
Audi-Using the Ontology(2) Suppose A encounters f-stop The ontology returns: -stop is synonymous with aperture Bridges the terminology gap between something a doesnt know to something A does know Syntactic divergence is no longer a hindrance 17 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web primer
17 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web Primer Audi – Using the Ontology (2) ⚫ Suppose A encounters f-stop – The Ontology returns: “f-stop is synonymous with aperture” ⚫ Bridges the terminology gap between something A doesn’t know to something A does know ⚫ Syntactic divergence is no longer a hindrance
Lecture Outline Horizontal Information products at elsevier 2. Data Integration at audi 3. Skill Finding at Swiss Life 4. Think Tank Portal at enersearch 5. E-Learning 6. Web services 7. Other Scenarios 18 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web primer
18 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web Primer Lecture Outline 1. Horizontal Information Products at Elsevier 2. Data Integration at Audi 3. Skill Finding at Swiss Life 4. Think Tank Portal at EnerSearch 5. E-Learning 6. Web Services 7. Other Scenarios
Swiss Life- The Setting o Swiss Life is one of Europe's leading life Insurers 11,000 employees, $14 billion of written premiums Active in about 50 different countries o The most important resources of any company for solving knowledge intensive tasks are The tacit knowledge, personal competencies, and skills of its employees 19 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web primer
19 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web Primer Swiss Life – The Setting ⚫ Swiss Life is one of Europe’s leading life insurers – 11,000 employees, $14 billion of written premiums – Active in about 50 different countries ⚫ The most important resources of any company for solving knowledge intensive tasks are: – The tacit knowledge, personal competencies, and skills of its employees
Swiss Life- The problem o One of the major building blocks of enterprise knowledge management is An electronically accessible repository of people's capabilities, experiences, and key knowledge areas A skills repository can be used to enable a search for people with specific skills expose skill gaps and competency levels direct training as part of career planning document the company' s intellectual capital 20 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web primer
20 Chapter 6 A Semantic Web Primer Swiss Life – The Problem ⚫ One of the major building blocks of enterprise knowledge management is: – An electronically accessible repository of people’s capabilities, experiences, and key knowledge areas ⚫ A skills repository can be used to: – enable a search for people with specific skills – expose skill gaps and competency levels – direct training as part of career planning – document the company’s intellectual capital