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* December 1, 2007 Following the success of last year's competition, and the award of the SUMO prize to Robin Sharp of the Technical University of Denmark, we are announcing the second annual SUMO prize for the best open source ontology extension of SUMO. {nid 13M6} The SUMO prize is for US$3000.00 will be awarded to the best open source project that extends SUMO. Entries will be due electronically to Adam Pease (apease [at] articulatesoftware [dot] com) by December 1, 2007. Awards will be made December 31, 2007. Entries should be SUO-KIF files that extend SUMO and its domain ontologies, and conform to them. {nid 13M7} In addition to the logical soundness of the ontology with respect to the SUMO ontologies, entries will be judged on several criteria: (1) Degree of formalization - is the ontology fully specified with rules or just a taxonomy or collection of basic relational statements? (2) Scope and coverage of the ontology - is it just a few terms, or hundreds? (3) Does the ontology cover a coherent new topic or domain? (4) Actual utility of the ontology in an application. Further details are available at <http://www.ontologyportal.org/prize.html> {nid 13M8} |
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* December 1, 2007 Following the success of last year's competition, and the award of the SUMO prize to Robin Sharp of the Technical University of Denmark, we are announcing the second annual SUMO prize for the best open source ontology extension of SUMO. The SUMO prize is for US$3000.00 will be awarded to the best open source project that extends SUMO. Entries will be due electronically to Adam Pease (apease [at] articulatesoftware [dot] com) by December 1, 2007. Awards will be made December 31, 2007. Entries should be SUO-KIF files that extend SUMO and its domain ontologies, and conform to them. In addition to the logical soundness of the ontology with respect to the SUMO ontologies, entries will be judged on several criteria: (1) Degree of formalization - is the ontology fully specified with rules or just a taxonomy or collection of basic relational statements? (2) Scope and coverage of the ontology - is it just a few terms, or hundreds? (3) Does the ontology cover a coherent new topic or domain? (4) Actual utility of the ontology in an application. Further details are available at <http://www.ontologyportal.org/prize.html> {nid 13M8} |