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F -- A Model of Events based on the Foundational Ontology DOLCE+DnS Ultralite

Ansgar Scherp, Thomas Franz, Carsten Saathoff, Steffen Staab

TL;DR

The Event-Model-F is developed following the pattern-oriented approach of DUL, is modularized in different ontologies, and can be easily extended by domain specific ontologies.

Abstract

The lack of a formal model of events hinders interoperability in distributed event-based systems. In this paper, we present a formal model of events, called Event-Model-F. The model is based on the foundational ontology DOLCE+DnS Ultralite (DUL) and provides comprehensive support to represent time and space, objects and persons, as well as mereological, causal, and correlative relationships between events. In addition, the Event-Model-F provides a flexible means for event composition, modeling event causality and event correlation, and representing different interpretations of the same event. The Event-Model-F is developed following the pattern-oriented approach of DUL, is modularized in different ontologies, and can be easily extended by domain specific ontologies.

F -- A Model of Events based on the Foundational Ontology DOLCE+DnS Ultralite

TL;DR

The Event-Model-F is developed following the pattern-oriented approach of DUL, is modularized in different ontologies, and can be easily extended by domain specific ontologies.

Abstract

The lack of a formal model of events hinders interoperability in distributed event-based systems. In this paper, we present a formal model of events, called Event-Model-F. The model is based on the foundational ontology DOLCE+DnS Ultralite (DUL) and provides comprehensive support to represent time and space, objects and persons, as well as mereological, causal, and correlative relationships between events. In addition, the Event-Model-F provides a flexible means for event composition, modeling event causality and event correlation, and representing different interpretations of the same event. The Event-Model-F is developed following the pattern-oriented approach of DUL, is modularized in different ontologies, and can be easily extended by domain specific ontologies.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 17 sections, 3 figures.

Figures (3)

  • Figure 1: A distributed event-based system for emergency response
  • Figure 2: The patterns of F, namely (a) participation, (b) mereology, (c) causality, (d) correlation, (e) documentation, and (f) interpretation and (g) example of applying the F ontology
  • Figure 3: Comparison of Event Models