KEOD is part of IC3K, the International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management
Registration to KEOD allows free access to all other IC3K conferences
Registration to KEOD allows free access to all other IC3K conferences
Knowledge Engineering (KE) refers to all technical, scientific and social aspects involved in building, maintaining and using knowledge-based systems. KE is a multidisciplinary field, bringing in concepts and methods from several computer science domains such as artificial intelligence, databases, expert systems, decision support systems and geographic information systems. From the software development point of view, KE uses principles that are strongly related to software engineering. KE is also related to mathematical logic, as well as strongly involved in cognitive science and socio-cognitive engineering where the knowledge is produced by humans and is structured according to our understanding of how human reasoning and logic works. Currently, KE is strongly related to the construction of shared knowledge bases or conceptual frameworks, often designated as ontologies.
Ontology Development aims at building reusable semantic structures that can be informal vocabularies, catalogs, glossaries as well as more complex finite formal structures representing the entities within a domain and the relationships between those entities. Ontologies, have been gaining interest and acceptance in computational audiences: formal ontologies are a form of software, thus software development methodologies can be adapted to serve ontology development. A wide range of applications is emerging, especially given the current web emphasis, including library science, ontology-enhanced search, e-commerce and configuration.
KEOD aims at becoming a major meeting point for researchers and practitioners interested in the study and development of methodologies and technologies for Knowledge Engineering and Ontology Development.
Ontology Development aims at building reusable semantic structures that can be informal vocabularies, catalogs, glossaries as well as more complex finite formal structures representing the entities within a domain and the relationships between those entities. Ontologies, have been gaining interest and acceptance in computational audiences: formal ontologies are a form of software, thus software development methodologies can be adapted to serve ontology development. A wide range of applications is emerging, especially given the current web emphasis, including library science, ontology-enhanced search, e-commerce and configuration.
KEOD aims at becoming a major meeting point for researchers and practitioners interested in the study and development of methodologies and technologies for Knowledge Engineering and Ontology Development.
Program Chair
Jan L. G. Dietz, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
IC3K Keynote Speakers
Jay Liebowitz, University of Maryland University College, U.S.A.Carole Goble, University of Manchester, U.K.
Mayer Aladjem, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Guus Schreiber, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Jan L. G. Dietz, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
Special Session
Enterprise Ontology - SSEO
KEOD 2010 received 134 submissions, of which 10% were accepted as full papers. Additionally, 20% were presented as short papers and 28% as posters.
All papers presented at the conference venue were included in the SciTePress Digital Library.
All papers presented at the conference venue were included in the SciTePress Digital Library.
A short list of presented papers will be selected
so that revised and extended versions of
these papers will be published by
Springer-Verlag in a CCIS Series book
Proceedings will be submitted for indexation by: