Difference between revisions of "Engineering ontologies"

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The ontologies are described in [http://opus.kobv.de/tuberlin/volltexte/2006/1437/pdf/tudorache_tania.pdf this PhD thesis] in Chapter 4. Use cases for the ontologies are described in Chapter 6.
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The ontologies are described in [https://depositonce.tu-berlin.de/bitstream/11303/1774/1/Dokument_34.pdf this PhD thesis] in Chapter 4. Use cases for the ontologies are described in Chapter 6.
  
The engineering ontologies have been developed using the Protege frames formalism. Protege can be downloaded from the [http://protege.stanford.edu Protege website].
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The engineering ontologies have been developed using the Protege frames formalism.  
  
To convert the ontologies into OWL, please use the latest version of [http://protege.stanford.edu/download/download.html Protege 3.x]. Open the frames ontologies one by one (starting with the most included one), and go to <code>File menu -> Export -> OWL</code> (or <code>File menu -> Convert project to format -> OWL/RDF files </code> to preserve also the forms). In this process, you may be required to resolve some of the imports, and that is why it is important to start with the most included one.
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To convert the ontologies into OWL, please use the latest version of [http://protege.stanford.edu/download/protege/3.5/installanywhere/Web_Installers/ Protege 3.x]. Open the frames ontologies one by one (starting with the most included one), and go to <code>File menu -> Export -> OWL</code> (or <code>File menu -> Convert project to format -> OWL/RDF files </code> to preserve also the forms). In this process, you may be required to resolve some of the imports, and that is why it is important to start with the most included one.
 
   
 
   
  
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Author: Tania Tudorache <tudorache _at_ stanford.edu>
 
Author: Tania Tudorache <tudorache _at_ stanford.edu>
  
Date: 2008.06.04
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Last updated: 2015.07.10

Latest revision as of 08:32, June 3, 2016

Engineering ontologies

The engineering ontologies are a set of small and reusable ontologies for representing engineering artifacts.

  • The Components ontology – defines the part-whole relationship and is used to represent the decomposition structure of systems
  • The Connections ontology – defines the topology of a system and describes how components of a system are connected to each other
  • The Requirements ontology – used for representing requirements and their various relationships, as well as the relationships between requirements and systems
  • The Constraints ontology – used for defining constraints on different model elements, for instance, constraints on model parameters expressed as mathematical relationships


The ontologies are described in this PhD thesis in Chapter 4. Use cases for the ontologies are described in Chapter 6.

The engineering ontologies have been developed using the Protege frames formalism.

To convert the ontologies into OWL, please use the latest version of Protege 3.x. Open the frames ontologies one by one (starting with the most included one), and go to File menu -> Export -> OWL (or File menu -> Convert project to format -> OWL/RDF files to preserve also the forms). In this process, you may be required to resolve some of the imports, and that is why it is important to start with the most included one.


Download: EngineeringOntologies.zip - The archive contains a small example project (EngineTransmission_3.pprj) that uses the engineering ontologies.


Author: Tania Tudorache <tudorache _at_ stanford.edu>

Last updated: 2015.07.10