Yet further along the continuum, we have explicit semantics expressed in a formal language. However, they are intended for human processing only. We can think of this as formal documentation, or as formal specifications of meaning. Some examples of this are: 1. Modal logic is used to define the semantics of ontological categories such as rigidity and identity [Guarino et al. 1994]. These are for the benefit of humans, to reduce or eliminate ambiguity in what is meant by these ideas. [...] Formal semantics for human processing can go a long way to eliminating ambiguity, but because there is still a human in the loop, there is ample scope for errors.



« Formal semantics for human processing »


A quote saved on Feb. 26, 2013.

#semantics
#human-processing
#explicit-semantics
#formal-specification
#processing
#formal-semantics


Top related keywords - double-click to view:

 semantics human-processing explicit-semantics processing formal-semantics formal-specification annotation-properties data-properties blank-nodes OWL-DL World-Wide-Web Wide-Web RDF-data use-cases raw-data information customers ontology idea community grammar