Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO). de Bruijn, J., Bussler, C., Domingue, J., Fensel, D., Hepp, M., Keller, U., Kifer, M., König-Ries, B., Kopecky, J., Lara, R., Lausen, H., Oren, E., Polleres, A., Roman, D., Scicluna, J., & Stollberg, M. June, 2005. W3C member submission
Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO) [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
The potential to achieve dynamic, scalable and cost-effective infrastructure for electronic transactions in business and public administration has driven recent research efforts towards so-called Semantic Web services, that is enriching Web services with machine-processable semantics. Supporting this goal, the Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO) provides a conceptual framework and a formal language for semantically describing all relevant aspects of Web services in order to facilitate the automation of discovering, combining and invoking electronic services over the Web. This document describes the overall structure of WSMO by its four main elements: ontologies, which provide the terminology used by other WSMO elements, Web service descriptions, which describe the functional and behavioral aspects of a Web service, goals that represent user desires, and mediators, which aim at automatically handling interoperability problems between different WSMO elements. Along with introducing the main elements of WSMO, the syntax of the formal logic language used in WSMO is provided. The semantics and computationally tractable subsets of this logical language are defined and discussed in a separate document of the submission, the Web Service Modeling Language (WSML) document.
@misc{poll-etal-2005,
	Abstract = {The potential to achieve dynamic, scalable and cost-effective infrastructure for electronic transactions in business and public administration has driven recent research efforts towards so-called Semantic Web services, that is enriching Web services with machine-processable semantics. Supporting this goal, the Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO) provides a conceptual framework and a formal language for semantically describing all relevant aspects of Web services in order to facilitate the automation of discovering, combining and invoking electronic services over the Web. This document describes the overall structure of WSMO by its four main elements: ontologies, which provide the terminology used by other WSMO elements, Web service descriptions, which describe the functional and behavioral aspects of a Web service, goals that represent user desires, and mediators, which aim at automatically handling interoperability problems between different WSMO elements. Along with introducing the main elements of WSMO, the syntax of the formal logic language used in WSMO is provided. The semantics and computationally tractable subsets of this logical language are defined and discussed in a separate document of the submission, the Web Service Modeling Language (WSML) document.},
	Author = {Jos de Bruijn and Christoph Bussler and John Domingue and Dieter Fensel and Martin Hepp and Uwe Keller and Michael Kifer and Birgitta K{\"o}nig-Ries and Jacek Kopecky and Rub{\'e}n Lara and Holger Lausen and Eyal Oren and Axel Polleres and Dumitru Roman and James Scicluna and Michael Stollberg},
	Day = 3,
	Month = JUN,
	Note = {W3C member submission},
	Title = {{Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO)}},
	Url = {http://www.w3.org/Submission/WSMO/},
	Year = 2005,
	Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.w3.org/Submission/WSMO/}}

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