Polysemy and Synonymy Detection in Ontology Engineering
Authors: Chaleplioglou, Artemis 
Papavlasopoulos, Sozon 
Poulos, Marios 
Issue Date: 1-Aug-2020
Journal: WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications 
Volume: 17
Keywords: Cardiology, Index analysis, Latent Semantic Analysis, Singular Value Decomposition
Abstract: 
Polysemy, when a single term has multiple meanings, and synonymy, when multiple terms have the same meaning, are common phenomena in linguistics as well as in scientific knowledge. In ontology engineering, it is vital to detect the synonyms annotations and the multiple inheritances because of polysemy. The persistence of these issues in the semantic description of a knowledge domain causes problematic interoperability and data processing. The disambiguation of the entities, properties and relationships sense in a semantic web ontology significantly improves linked data generation and information retrieval. We explore the synonymy and polysemy in the setting of a cardiology terminology generated from textbooks on the basis of field coverage, professionals’ associations’ recommendations and bibliometrics, for the building of a cardiologic ontology. From 56,134 terms collected we found that 67.7% were unique. The indexed terms included single words, compound words and multi-word expressions. The frequency of their appearances in the combined master index was calculated and used as a marker of their significance. To cope with the linguistic polysemy and synonymy of terms, we examined them in WordNet, MeSH and BioPortal, as well as by latent semantic analysis (LSA) through singular value decomposition (SVD). Through these approaches we managed to identify and decipher semantic associations and relationships between the terms. We proposed a roadmap for ontology building from scratch by utilizing intrinsic and extrinsic knowledge resources and reuse of metadata. We anticipate that this approach is applicable in …
ISSN: 1790-0832
DOI: 10.37394/23209.2020.17.14
URI: https://uniwacris.uniwa.gr/handle/3000/414
Type: Article
Department: Department of Archival, Library and Information Studies 
School: School of Administrative, Economics and Social Sciences 
Affiliation: University of West Attica (UNIWA) 
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