Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
￿ SemanticWebURI : An OWL Class. A URI used to identify any resource that
is not accessible on the Web.
- rdfs:subClassOf URI
- identifies only NonInformationResource
- redirectsTo min 1 (URI and identifies only
ldow:AssociatedDescription)
￿ NonInformationResource : An OWL Class. All resources that are not
information resources.
- rdfs:subClassOf Resource
- owl:disjointWith InformationResource
￿ ldow:AssociatedDescription : An OWL Class. A resource that exists
primarily to describe a non-web accessible resource.
- rdfs:subClassOf WebResource
- redirectedFrom some SemanticWebURI
- isAbout exactly 1 ldow:NonInformationResource
￿ tag:redirects303To : An OWL Object Property. A redirection that uses
the HTTP 303 status code.
- owl:inverseOf redirected303From
- rdfs:domain URI
- rdfs:range URI
- rdf:type owl:FunctionalProperty
￿ tag:redirectsHashTo : An OWL Object Property. A redirection that works
via the fragment identifier being removed from the URI.
- owl:inverseOf redirectedHashFrom
- rdfs:domain URI
- rdfs:range URI
3.5
The Semantic Web: Good Old Fashioned AI Redux?
Despite its apparent utility in crafting formal ontologies, at the present moment the
Semantic Web has not taken off as part of the wider Web. To many, it has seemed
that the Semantic Web was nothing but a second coming of classical artificial
intelligence. As put by Yorick Wilks, “Some have taken the initial presentation of
the Semantic Web by Berners-Lee, Hendler and Lassila to be a restatement of the
Good Old Fashioned AI agenda in new and fashionable World Wide Web terms”
(2008a). So why would the Semantic Web succeed where classical knowledge
representations failed? The first reason would be a difference in the underlying
intellectual project. A second reason would be a difference in technology.
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