ACM Home Page
Please provide us with feedback. Feedback
Learning term-relationships for ontology construction: creating business ontologies for event explanation
Full text PdfPdf (59 KB)
Source International Conference On Knowledge Capture archive
Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Knowledge capture table of contents
Banff, Alberta, Canada
POSTER SESSION: Posters table of contents
Pages: 191 - 192  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISBN:1-59593-163-5
Authors
Sandip Debnath  Penn State University, University Park, PA
Arun Upneja  Penn State University, University Park, PA
C. Lee Giles  Penn State University, University Park, PA
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGART: ACM Special Interest Group on Artificial Intelligence
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 6,   Downloads (12 Months): 33,   Citation Count: 0
Additional Information:

abstract   references   index terms   collaborative colleagues  

Tools and Actions: Request Permissions Request Permissions    Review this Article  
DOI Bookmark: Use this link to bookmark this Article: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1088622.1088663
What is a DOI?

ABSTRACT

Term-Relationship plays major role in several areas of research including document relevance, domain ontology construction or metadata extraction. As part of our work in finding explanation for market events (such as sudden or significant stock price change for a company), we use business ontologies to facilitate the relevance ranking of documents. We use the ontologies even further to rank individual sentences in a news article so that irrelevant events (in the form of sentences) in a relevant article will not get undue importance. This two-step ranking helps us in extracting important sentences which can be labelled as "responsible" or "explanatory" sentences for a significant stock price change. In this paper we show the performance evaluation of our relevance model using ontologies. We also show a few examples of sentences which can be thought of as providing explanation for some recent price changes.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

1
 
2
S. Debnath, T. Mullen, A. Upneja, and C. L. Giles. Knowledge discovery in web-directories: Finding term-relations to build a business ontology. In upcoming proceedings of EC-WEB, 2005.

Collaborative Colleagues:
Sandip Debnath: colleagues
Arun Upneja: colleagues
C. Lee Giles: colleagues