1 / 17

Asuman Dogac, METU, Turkey Yildiray Kabak, SRDC Ltd.,Turkey

A Brief Introduction to the Semantic Representations of the UN/CEFACT CCTS-based Electronic Business Document Artifacts. Asuman Dogac, METU, Turkey Yildiray Kabak, SRDC Ltd.,Turkey. The Problem Addressed: All CCTS based standards use CCTS differently.

bethan
Download Presentation

Asuman Dogac, METU, Turkey Yildiray Kabak, SRDC Ltd.,Turkey

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Brief Introduction to the Semantic Representations of the UN/CEFACT CCTS-based Electronic Business Document Artifacts Asuman Dogac, METU, Turkey Yildiray Kabak, SRDC Ltd.,Turkey

  2. The Problem Addressed: All CCTS based standards use CCTS differently

  3. The Solution Envisaged: Developing Semantic Tools to Semi-Automate the Mappings among Different CCTS based Standards

  4. SET TC Objectives revisited • UN/CEFACT CCTS (Core Component Technical Specification) defines the semantics of document artifacts • However, currently this semantics is available only through text-based search mechanisms • SET TC aim is to explicate the semantics of CCTS based business document standards by defining their semantic properties through a formal, machine processable language as an ontology • In this way, it becomes possible to compute a harmonized ontology which gives • The similarities among document schema ontology classes of different document standards through both • The semantic properties they share and • The semantic equivalences established through reasoning

  5. The Upper Ontologies • The semantics is explicated at two levels: At the first level, an upper ontology describing the CCTS document content model is specified • Furthermore,at this level, the upper ontologies of the prominent CCTS based standards,namely, GS1 XML, OAGIS 9.1 and UBL are also developed • The various equivalence relationships between the classes of the CCTS upper ontology and theCCTS based document standard ontologies are defined • These relationships arelater used to find the similarities among the document artifacts from differentdocument schemas

  6. Example: Core Component Data Type semantics • CCTS provides a fixed set of reusable “Core Component Data Types" (CCTs) such as Amount, Identier, or Measure • The Core Component Type semanticsis explicated through the “owl: CoreComponentType" class • For each of the14 CCTs, a corresponding OWL class is created and inserted as the subclassof “owl:CoreComponentType" class

  7. Core Component Data Type semantics <owl:Class rdf:ID="CoreComponentType" /> <owl:Class rdf:ID="Amount.Type"> <rdfs:subClassOf rdf:resource="#CoreComponentType"/> </owl:Class> <owl:Class rdf:ID="BinaryObject.Type"> <rdfs:subClassOf rdf:resource="#CoreComponentType"/> </owl:Class> <owl:Class rdf:ID="Code.Type"> <rdfs:subClassOf rdf:resource="#CoreComponentType"/> </owl:Class> <owl:Class rdf:ID="Date.Type"> <rdfs:subClassOf rdf:resource="#CoreComponentType"/> </owl:Class> <owl:Class rdf:ID="DateTime.Type"> <rdfs:subClassOf rdf:resource="#CoreComponentType"/> </owl:Class> …

  8. Other Semantic Properties of CCTS Core Components • Context (the “context” semantics is defined at an absolute minimum since UN/CEFACT UCM is working on this subject) • The structure of the core components(BCCs and ASCCs making up ACCs) • The semantics implied by the naming convention used(“Object Class Term” and “Representation Term”) • The semantics implied by the Business Information Entities (based on a Core Component and used in a context) • The semantics implied by the code lists

  9. CCTS Upper Ontology

  10. The Upper Ontologies • The semantics is explicated at two levels: At the first level, an upper ontology describing the CCTS document content model is specied • Furthermore,at this level, the upper ontologies for the prominent CCTS based standards,namely, GS1 XML, OAGIS 9.1 and UBL are also developed • The various equivalence relationships between the classes of the CCTS upper ontology and theCCTS based document standard ontologies are defined • These relationships arelater used to find the similarities among the document artifacts from differentdocument schemas

  11. Document Schema Ontologies • At the next level, the semantics of the document schemas in each standard are described based on its upper ontology • The difference between the document schema specific ontology and the upper ontology is that • The upper ontology describes the generic entities in a document content model • Whereas document schema ontologies describe the actual document artifacts as the subclasses of the classes in the upper ontology • The SET XSD-OWL tool converts a CCTS based document schema into OASIS SET TC OWL Definition and is publicly available from http://www.srdc.metu.edu.tr/iSURF/OASIS-SET-TC/tools/OASISSET.zip

  12. SET Harmonized Ontology • When these ontologies are harmonized using a DL reasoner, the computed inferred ontologies reveal the implicit equivalences and subsumtion relationships between the document artifacts • In other words, • The shared semantic properties of the CCTS based document artifacts together with • The implicit relationships inferred, help to identify their similarities

  13. Next step… • Further explanations related with the Deliverable? • How to use SET Specifications in real life applications? • In the iSURF Project to map supply chain planning documents conforming to different standards to each other • TC Members proposals…

  14. Thank you!

More Related