Wednesday June 06

 

Thursday June 07

8:15

Registration

 

 

8:45

Opening

9:00-10:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

S1: Applications in Industry

(10mn)

 

1.      Suzette Stoutenburg, Leo Obrst and Deborah Nichols. Ontologies in OWL for Rapid Enterprise Integration

2.      H. Graves. Ontology Engineering For Product Development

3.      Z. Liu, A. Ranganathan and A. Riabov. Use of OWL for describing Stream Processing Components to enable Automatic Composition

4.      FP Servant. Semantic Web Technologies in Technical Automotive Documentation

 

 

 

Q&A: 20 mn

9:00-10:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

S5: OWL and Requirements in Life Sciences  
(10mn)

 

1.    Natalia Villanueva-Rosales and Michel Dumontier. Describing chemical functional groups in OWL-DL for the classification of chemical compounds

2.    Chris Mungall. Representing Phenotypes in OWL

3.    C. Maria Keet, Marco Roos and M. Scott Marshall. A survey of requirements for automated reasoning services for bio-ontologies in OWL

4.    Kent Spackman. An Examination of OWL and the Requirements of a Large Health Care Terminology

 

 

 

Q&A: 20mn

10:00-10:30

 

S2: OWL and Rules in Applications

(5mn)

 

1.      Brian Lowe, Brian Caruso and Jon Corson-Rikert. VIVO Development Roadmap: Enhancing an Ontology-Based University Research Portal with OWL and Rules

2.      Jose Vieira and Arianna Ciula. Implementing an RDF/OWL Ontology on Henry the III Fine Rolls

3.      Stephen Larson and Maryann Martone. Rule-Based Reasoning With A Multi-Scale Neuroanatomical Ontology

4.      Pierre Mariot, Jean-Pierre Cotton, Christine Golbreich, Alain Berger and François Vexler. Querying multiple sources with OWL ontologies: an exploratory study in an automotive company

5.      FM Lesaffre. A business case of the use of ontologies for knowledge capitalization and exploitation

 

 

Q&A: 10 mn

10:00-10:30

 

S6: Experiences in Sciences and Life-Sciences

(5mn)

 

1.   Deborah McGuinness, Peter Fox, Luca Cinquini, Patrick West, James Benedict, and Jose Garcia. Current and future uses of OWL for scientific data frameworks: successes and limitations

2.    Marie Gustafsson and Göran Falkman. Experiences in Modeling Clinical Examinations in Oral Medicine Using OWL

3.    Lisa Fong, Stephen Larson, Amarnath Gupta, Christopher Condit, William Bug, Li Chen, Ruth West, Stephan Lamont, Masako Terada and Maryann Martone. An Ontology-Driven Knowledge Environment For Subcellular Neuroanatomy

 

 

 

 

 

Q&A: 10 mn

10:30-11:00

 

                                      Coffee Break       

10:30-11:00

 

                                      Coffee Break                

 

11:00-12:00

 

S3: Query languages and Extensions   

(10mn)

 

1.      Boris Motik, Ian Horrocks and Ulrike Sattler. Adding Integrity Constraints to OWL

2.      Giorgos Stoilos and Giorgos Stamou. Extending Fuzzy Description Logics for the Semantic Web

3.      Diego Calvanese, Giuseppe De Giacomo, Domenico Lembo, Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati. Can OWL model football leagues?

4.      Evren Sirin and Bijan Parsia. SPARQL-DL: SPARQL Query for OWL-DL

 

 

Q&A: 20 mn

11:00-11:45

 

S7: Ontology formats

(10mn)

 

1.    Christine Golbreich and Ian Horrocks. The OBO to OWL mapping, GO to OWL 1.1!

2.    Rob Shearer. Structured Ontology Format

3.    Michael Smith, Andrew Schain, Kendall Clark, Arlen Griffey and Vladimir Kolovski. Mother, May I? OWL-based Policy Management at NASA

 

 

 

 

 

Q&A:15mn

12:00-13:00

 

Panel 1

 

SPARQL, Rules and OWL ?

 

 

Discussion

(1h)

11:45-12:45

 

Panel 3

 

Life Sciences: Lessons, Formats,

Future Developments?

 

Discussion

(1h)

13:00-14:00

 

Lunch

12:45-14:00

 

 

Lunch

 


Afternoon

 

 

Wednesday June 06

 

Thursday June 07

14:00-15:30

OWL: Present and beyond?

 

1.       Report on OWL 1.1 Standarization Efforts

2.       Technical Issues Discussion

 

14:00-15:30

 

Ongoing and Future Standarization Efforts

- W3C Working Group -

15:30-16:00

                                      Coffee Break        

15:30-16:00

 

Coffee Break

16:00-16:30

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

16:30-17:15

 

S4 : Implementations  and API

(5mn)

 

1. Matthew Horridge, Sean Bechhofer and Olaf Noppens Igniting the OWL 1.1 Touch Paper: The OWL API

2. Timo Weithöner, Thorsten Liebig, Marko Luther and Sebastian Böhm. DIG 2.0 Reference Middleware

3. Diego Calvanese and Mariano Rodriguez. An Extension of DIG 2.0 for Handling Bulk Data

4. Atila Kaya, Ralf Moeller, Alissa Kaplunova and Tobias Berger. Towards a Scalable and Efficient Middleware for Instance Retrieval Inference Services

 

Q&A: 10 mn

 

Tools and Natural Language

(10mn)

 

5. Kaarel Kaljurand and Norbert Fuchs. Verbalizing OWL in Attempto Controlled English

6. Michael Wessel and Ralf Möller. Design Principles and Realization Techniques for User Friendly, Interactive, and Scalable Ontology Browsing and Inspection Tools

7. Edward Thomas, Jeff Z. Pan and Derek Sleeman. ONTOSEARCH2: Searching Ontologies Semantically

8. Raul Garcia-Castro, Asunción Gómez-Pérez and Jesus Prieto-Gonzalez. IBSE: An OWL Interoperability Evaluation Infrastructure

 

 

Q&A: 10 mn

16:00-17:00

 

S8Ontology Reasoning and Engineering

(10mn)

 

1.    Bernardo Cuenca Grau, Ian Horrocks, Yevgeny Kazakov and Ulrike Sattler. Extracting Modules from Ontologies:  A Logic-based Approach

2.    Franz Baader, Bernhard Ganter, Ulrike Sattler and Baris Sertkaya. Completing Description Logic Knowledge Bases using Formal Concept Analysis

3.    Rolf Grütter and Bettina Bauer-Messmer. Combining OWL with RCC for Spatioterminological Reasoning on Environmental Data

4.   Francesca Alessandra Lisi. Reasoning with OWL-DL in Inductive Logic Programming

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Q&A: 20 mn

17:15-18:15

Panel 2

 

What is needed in Industry,

new extensions, editors, tools … ?

 

Discussion

(1h)

17:00-17:30

 

 

 

Business Meeting and Closing

 

 

 

18:15-18:45

Poster advertizing (3mn /Poster)

18:45-20:45

Demos, Poster Session and Buffet