News and Events

From NCOR Wiki
Revision as of 21:04, 29 March 2010 by 173.64.11.149 (talk)
Jump to navigationJump to search

KES IDT 2010, Baltimore, USA; 28 - 30 July 2010

Workshop on Ontology for Command and Control organized as part of the 2nd International Symposium on Intelligent Decision Technologies on the afternoon of Thursday, July 29.

Chair: Andreas Tolk; Co-Chair Barry Smith and Leslie Winters

For further details please go to the IDT website or contact Andreas Tolk.

Description

Information Systems are often applied to support command and control, not only in the military domain. Agile command and control requires agile information sharing with an increasingly wide variety of partners with very different world and business views. Current “net-centric” approaches improve information sharing on the technical level, but they fall short when it comes to the alignment of interpretation not just „interpretation; surely of data, processes, and constraints. They do not support information sharing across the larger command and control domain.

Intelligent Decision Technologies should bridge this gap. One of the most promising approaches to improve understanding and alignment as a presupposition of semantic interoperability between supporting systems is the use of ontologies. This invited session will present methods and applications of ontology-based methods, with a focus on Ontology for Intelligent Defence Decision Support. We will describe the underlying principles and provide success stories of such methods, and show how they can be used both within and without the defence domain.

Program

The session will include a tutorial by Barry Smith on How to Build an Ontology: The Command and Control Domain followed by a panel session led by Leslie Winters.

This tutorial will introduce the basic methods and tools of ontology, the successes and failures of ontology, the role of the Semantic Web and the OWL (Web Ontology Language), and the benefits which ontology can provide. It will explain the relations between ontologies, terminologies, and conceptual models. Finally, it will outline a general approach to ontology building and show how it can be applied in the Command and Control domain. The tutorial will be highly interactive.

Details of the panel will follow shortly.


General Ontology News and Event Information

University at Buffalo Ontology Research Group (ORG) News and Events Site: http://wings.buffalo.edu/faculty/research/org/Presentations.html

National Center for Biomedical Ontology (NCBO) News Site: http://www.bioontology.org/news.html

National Center for Biomedical Ontology (NCBO) Events Site: http://bioontology.org/events.html


Past NCOR Events

International Conference on Biomedical Ontology (July 24-26, 2009): [1]

Ontology for the Intelligence Community: Towards Effective Exploitation and Integration of Intelligence Resources (December 3-4, 2008): [2]

NCOR Inaugural Event (October 27, 2005) in Buffalo, NY. Details of the event, including presentations, photographs and a list of attendees, are available here: [3]

NCOR Inaugural Event, Associated Workshop on Bio-Ontologies (October 28, 2005). Presentations available here: [4]