Vol-1

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Volume

Volume
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number  1
acronym  
wikidataid  Q107266045→Q107266045
title  Reasoning about Structured Objects:

Knowledge Representation Meets Databases (KRDB '94) Proceedings of 1st Workshop KRDB'94 Saarbrücken, Germany, September 20-22, 1994.

description  
url  
date  
dblp  →
k10plus  →
urn  →urn:nbn:de:0074-1-5

Freitext

PTP Metadata

PTP Metadata vor CEUR-WS Vol1

DBLP metadata

https://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/series/ceurws/ceurws000-099.html

<dblp>
<proceedings key="conf/krdb/94" mdate="2020-02-12">
<editor>Franz Baader</editor>
<editor>Martin Buchheit</editor>
<editor>Manfred A. Jeusfeld</editor>
<editor>Werner Nutt</editor>
<title>
Reasoning about Structured Objects: Knowledge Representation Meets Databases, Proceedings of 1st Workshop KRDB'94, Saarbrücken, Germany, September 20-22, 1994
</title>
<series href="db/series/ceurws/index.html">CEUR Workshop Proceedings</series>
<publisher>CEUR-WS.org</publisher>
<year>1995</year>
<volume>1</volume>
<ee type="oa">http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1</ee>
<ee>https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0074-1-5</ee>
<url>db/conf/krdb/krdb94.html</url>
</proceedings>
</dblp>

Papers

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Description Logics for Schema Level Reasoning
                 in Databases
                                Maurizio Lenzerini
                     Dipartimento di Informatica e Sistemistica
                        Universit^Ra di Roma \La Sapienza"
                        Via Salaria 113, 00198 Roma, Italy


                                    Abstract
Several recent papers point out that the research on Description Logics and their
associated reasoning techniques can be pro tably exploited in several ways in the
area of Databases. We argue that one of the most important aspects of Databases
where we can take advantage of Description Logics is the one related to schema
level reasoning, i.e., reasoning at the intensional level of a database. This is the
case in schema design, schema maintenance, schema integration, schema trans-
lation, integrity checking, query evaluation in cooperative information systems,
etc. Indeed, on the one hand Description Logics can be seen as very powerful
data models, and on the other hand, they can serve as uni ed formalisms that
capture object-oriented, semantic and conceptual data models proposed in the
literature. Most importantly, they can provide useful reasoning services in all
the above mentioned tasks.