. Robertson, D., Barker, A., Besana, P., Bundy, A., Chen-Burger, Y., Dupplaw, D., Giunchiglia, F., Van Harmelen, F., Hassan, F., Kotoulas, S., Lambert, D., Li, G., McGinnis, J., McNeill, F., Osman, N., De Pinninck, A., Siebes, R., Sierra, C., & Walton, C. Volume 4891 LNCS. Models of interaction as a grounding for Peer to peer knowledge sharing, pages 81–129. 2008.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Most current attempts to achieve reliable knowledge sharing on a large scale have relied on pre-engineering of content and supply services. This, like traditional knowledge engineering, does not by itself scale to large, open, peer to peer systems because the cost of being precise about the absolute semantics of services and their knowledge rises rapidly as more services participate. We describe how to break out of this deadlock by focusing on semantics related to interaction and using this to avoid dependency on a priori semantic agreement; instead making semantic commitments incrementally at run time. Our method is based on interaction models that are mobile in the sense that they may be transferred to other components, this being a mechanism for service composition and for coalition formation. By shifting the emphasis to interaction (the details of which may be hidden from users) we can obtain knowledge sharing of sufficient quality for sustainable communities of practice without the barrier of complex meta-data provision prior to community formation.
@inbook{bf4d9dc0db0f47759bf872c849fc8b69,
  title     = "Models of interaction as a grounding for Peer to peer knowledge sharing",
  abstract  = "Most current attempts to achieve reliable knowledge sharing on a large scale have relied on pre-engineering of content and supply services. This, like traditional knowledge engineering, does not by itself scale to large, open, peer to peer systems because the cost of being precise about the absolute semantics of services and their knowledge rises rapidly as more services participate. We describe how to break out of this deadlock by focusing on semantics related to interaction and using this to avoid dependency on a priori semantic agreement; instead making semantic commitments incrementally at run time. Our method is based on interaction models that are mobile in the sense that they may be transferred to other components, this being a mechanism for service composition and for coalition formation. By shifting the emphasis to interaction (the details of which may be hidden from users) we can obtain knowledge sharing of sufficient quality for sustainable communities of practice without the barrier of complex meta-data provision prior to community formation.",
  author    = "David Robertson and Adam Barker and Paolo Besana and Alan Bundy and Chen-Burger, {Yun Heh} and David Dupplaw and Fausto Giunchiglia and {Van Harmelen}, Frank and Fadzil Hassan and Spyros Kotoulas and David Lambert and Guo-chao Li and Jarred McGinnis and Fiona McNeill and Nardine Osman and {De Pinninck}, {Adrian Perreau} and Ronny Siebes and Carles Sierra and Chris Walton",
  year      = "2008",
  doi       = "10.1007/978-3-540-89784-2_4",
  isbn      = "3540897836",
  volume    = "4891 LNCS",
  series    = "Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)",
  pages     = "81--129",
  booktitle = "Advances in Web Semantics I - Ontologies, Web Services and Applied Semantic Web",
}

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