Taxonomy/Ontology
Ontological thinking began a long time ago. It is only just now coming into its own in the computing sphere. Ontology is the key to the end of code.
Understanding Context Bibliographic References by Topic |
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Click on the links below to go to the references on this topic |
Allemang | 2011 | Semantic Web for the Working Ontologist | |||||
Aristotle | 1952 (5) | Categories (Categoriae) – translated by E. M. Edghill | |||||
Cambria | 2009 | Common Sense Computing: From the Society of the Mind to Digital Intuition and Beyond | |||||
Davies | 2009 | Semantic Knowledge Management | |||||
Fensel | 2004 | Ontologies: A Silver Bullet for Knowledge Management and Electronic Commerce | |||||
Goethe | 1948 | The Permanent Goethe | |||||
Hilbert 2011 | The World’s Technological Capacity to Store | Communicate | and Compute Information | ||||
Schank | 1972 | Conceptual Dependency: A Theory of Natural Language Understanding | |||||
Singh | 2004 | Computing Commonsense | |||||
Sowa | 1984 | Conceptual Structures: Information Processing in Mind and Machine | |||||
Swaine | 1988 | Developing a Taxonomy for Parallel Algorithms [\table] | |||||
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Intro | Context | 1 | Brains | 2 | Neurons | 3 | Neural Networks |
4 | Perception and Cognition | 5 | Fuzzy Logic | 6 | Language and Dialog | 7 | Cybernetic Models |
8 | Apps and Processes | 9 | The End of Code | Glossary | Bibliography |