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Introduction to Implementing Ontologies in the Web Ontology Language (OWL)

 

BioHealth Informatics group at the University of Manchester are pleased to 
invite you to participate in their internationally renowned OWL Ontology 
tutorials. 

 

It is to be hosted at the University of Manchester on 8 and 9 November 2011.

 

Abstract

This two-day introductory 'hands-on' workshop aims to provide attendees with 
both the theoretical foundations and practical experience to begin building OWL 
ontologies using the latest version of the Protégé-OWL tools (Protege4).  It is 
based on Manchester's well-known "Pizza tutorial" (see http://www.co-ode.org). 

 

This tutorial will cover the main conceptual parts of OWL through the hands-on 
building of an ontology of pizzas and their ingredients. A series of practical 
exercises take attendees through the process of conceptualizing the toppings 
found on a pizza; the entry of this classification into the Protégé 
environment; the description of many types of pizza. All this is set in the 
context of using automatic reasoning to check the consistency of the growing 
ontology and to use the reasoner to make queries about pizzas. 

 

Since 2003 this tutorial, in various forms, has been given over 30 times and 
been attended by hundreds of budding ontologists.

 

Aims

The aims of this tutorial are to:

- understand the use of ontologies

- understand statements written in OWL;

- understand the role of automatic reasoning in ontology building;

- build an ontology and use a reasoner to draw inferences based on that 
ontology;

- gain experience in the Protégé 4 ontology building environment;

- gain insight into how OWL can play a role in semantic metadata.

 

Speakers

Dr. Robert Stevens, is a Reader in BioHealth Informatics in the Bio and Health 
Informatics Group <http://www.cs.manchester.ac.uk/bhig>  at the University of 
Manchester.  His main areas of research interests include: (1) the development 
and use of ontologies 
<http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/~stevensr/menupages/research.php#ontology>  to 
describe biology and to make knowledge about molecular biology computationally 
useful; (2) communal building of ontologies -- enabling domain experts to use 
the power of formal, expressive languages, such as the Web Ontology Language 
(OWL); and (3) semantic description of content through ontologies in e-Science 
research.

Dr. Sebastian Brandt is Research Fellow based in the BioHealth Informatics 
Group in the School of Computer Science.  Currently Sebastian is working on a 
number of different projects including and industrial collaboration project 
with Siemens Health Services USA and the EU- Network of Excellence on Semantic 
Interoperability and Data Mining in Biomedicine.

Dr. Georgina Moulton is a Senior Teaching Fellow at the Northwest Institute of 
BioHealth Informatics (NIBHI). She develops and presents Continued Professional 
Development courses to national and international researchers from a range of 
disciplines.  Georgina has a background in Bioinformatics and Biochemistry.

 

Number of Places and Cost

In total there are 17 places.  The cost of the course is £350 per day.

 

Registration and Further Information

To register and for further information please visit the website at: 
http://www.nweh.org.uk/ViewCourses.aspx 
<http://www.nweh.org.uk/ViewCourses.aspx> 

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