Tag Archives: knowledge engineering

IC3K 2017 (Madeira, 1-3 Nov 2017)

9th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management

Funchal, Madeira – Portugal (1-3 November, 2017)

The conference hosts three separate mini-conferences. The purpose of the IC3K is to bring together researchers, engineers and practitioners on the areas of Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management. IC3K is composed of three co-located conferences, each specialized in at least one of the aforementioned main knowledge areas.

   9th International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Information Retrieval

Program Chair   Ana Fred, Instituto de Telecomunicações / IST, Portugal

   9th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Ontology Development

Program Co-chairs   David Aveiro, University of Madeira / Madeira-ITI, Portugal;
Jan Dietz, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands

   9th International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing

Program Co-chairs   Kecheng Liu, University of Reading, United Kingdom;
Jorge Bernardino, Polytechnic Institute of Coimbra – ISEC, Portugal;
Ana Carolina Salgado, Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil.

For more information about this conference, go to: http://www.ic3k.org
What is KEOD?
 Knowledge Engineering (KE) refers to all technical, scientific and social aspects involved in building, maintaining and using knowledge-based systems. KE is a multidisciplinary field, bringing in concepts and methods from several computer science domains such as artificial intelligence, databases, expert systems, decision support systems and geographic information systems.
Ontology Development (OD) aims at building reusable semantic structures that can be informal vocabularies, catalogs, glossaries as well as more complex finite formal structures representing the entities within a domain and the relationships between those entities. Ontologies, have been gaining interest and acceptance in computational audiences: formal ontologies are a form of software, thus software development methodologies can be adapted to serve ontology development. A wide range of applications is emerging, especially given the current web emphasis, including library science, ontology-enhanced search, e-commerce and business process design.