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This year’s Ontology Summit is titled “Ontology for Big Systems” and seeks to explore, identify and articulate how ontological methods can bring value to the various disciplines required to engineer a “big system.” The term “big system” is intended to cover a large scope that includes many of the terms encountered in the media such as big data, complex systems, cloud computing, and crowd sourcing. Established disciplines that fall within the summit scope include systems engineering, software engineering, and data mining. {nid 317L}
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This year’s Ontology Summit is titled “Ontology for Big Systems” and seeks to explore, identify and articulate how ontological methods can bring value to the various disciplines required to engineer a “big system.” The term “big system” is intended to cover a large scope that includes many of the terms encountered in the media such as big data, complex systems, intelligent or smart systems, cloud computing, netcentricity and collective intelligence. Established disciplines that fall within the summit scope include systems engineering, software engineering, and data mining. {nid 317Q}
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The principal goal of the summit is to produce a series of recommendations describing how ontologies can help, as well as illustrations where these techniques have been, or could be, applied in domains including bioinformatics, intelligence, the smart electrical grid, supply chains, mobile computing and net-centricity (meaning advanced knowledge management). As is traditional with the Ontology Summit series, the results will be captured in the form of a communiqué, with expanded supporting material provided on the web. {nid 317M}
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The principal goal of the summit is to bring together and foster collaboration between the ontology community, systems community and stake holders of some of the “big systems.” Together, the summit participants will exchange ideas on how ontological analysis and ontology engineering might make a difference, when applied in these “big systems.” We will aim towards producing a series of recommendations describing how ontologies can make a difference; as well as providing illustrations where these techniques have been, or could be, applied in domains such as bioinformatics, electronic health records, intelligence, the smart electrical grid, manufacturing and supply chains, earth and environmental, cyberinfrastructure (or possibly “cyberphysical systems”) and e-science. As is traditional with the Ontology Summit series, the results will be captured in the form of a communiqué, with expanded supporting material provided on the web. {nid 317R}
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