Difference between revisions of "ISWC2010 Evaluation"

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(Weather Background Knowledge)
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<strong>25 Miles</strong>
 
<strong>25 Miles</strong>
[[Image:25miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 4. ]]
+
[[Image:25miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 5. ]]
 
<strong>50 Miles</strong>
 
<strong>50 Miles</strong>
[[Image:50miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 5. ]]
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[[Image:50miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 6. ]]
 
<strong>100 Miles</strong>
 
<strong>100 Miles</strong>
[[Image:100miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 6. ]]
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[[Image:100miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 7. ]]
 
<strong>200 Miles</strong>
 
<strong>200 Miles</strong>
[[Image:200miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 7. ]]
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[[Image:200miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 8. ]]
 
<strong>400 Miles</strong>
 
<strong>400 Miles</strong>
[[Image:400miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 8. ]]
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[[Image:400miles.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 9. ]]
  
  
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<strong>Grounded Percepts</strong>
 
<strong>Grounded Percepts</strong>
[[Image:trend_grounded.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 9. ]]
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[[Image:trend_grounded.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 10. ]]
 
<strong>Extraneous Percepts</strong>
 
<strong>Extraneous Percepts</strong>
[[Image:trend_extraneous.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 10. ]]
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[[Image:trend_extraneous.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 11. ]]
  
  
 
====Theories Generated during Evaluation====
 
====Theories Generated during Evaluation====
[[Image:trend_theory.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 11. ]]
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[[Image:trend_theory.jpg|none|thumb|600px| Figure 12. ]]

Revision as of 18:54, 25 June 2010

Ontology of Perception: A Semantic Web Approach to Enhance Machine Perception

Today, many sensor networks and their applications employ a brute force approach to collecting and analyzing sensor data, and ignore the semantics inherent in the environmental data. Such an approach often wastes valuable resources – including both energy and computational resources – by unnecessarily tasking sensors and generating observations of minimal use. People, on the other hand, have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to efficiently perceive their environment. Such mechanisms include the use of background knowledge to determine what aspects of the environment to focus and a strong interdependent relationship between our ability to observe and perceive. In this paper, we develop an ontology of perception – derived from cognitive theory – that may be used to more efficiently collect and analyze sensor data. We evaluate this approach by collecting and analyzing observations of weather conditions, and show up to 50% reduction in the number of observations necessary for analysis.


System Architecture

Perception Cycle

Figure 1. Perception Cycle.

Perception Process

Figure 2. Perception Process.

Observation Process

Figure 3. Observation Process.


Ontologies and Knowledge Bases

Weather Background Knowledge

Figure 4.

Statistics

Percepts Generated during Evaluation: # and %

25 Miles

Figure 5.

50 Miles

Figure 6.

100 Miles

Figure 7.

200 Miles

Figure 8.

400 Miles

Figure 9.


Percepts Generated during Evaluation: Trends

Grounded Percepts

Figure 10.

Extraneous Percepts

Figure 11.


Theories Generated during Evaluation

Figure 12.