Abstract
Nowadays, none can expect that knowledge about some part of reality will not change. Consequently, a representation of such evolving knowledge (for example, ontologies) also changes. Such changes entail that applications incorporating such knowledge may become compromised and yield wrong results. An example of such an application is ontology alignment which can be informally described as a set of connections between two ontologies. Those connections mark elements from two ontologies that relate to the same parts of reality. In changing one of the corresponding ontologies, such connections may become invalid. One may designate the ontology alignment once again from scratch for altered ontologies. However, such an approach is time and resource-consuming. The paper comprehensively presents our ontology evolution and alignment maintenance framework. It can be used to preserve the validity of ontology alignment using only the analysis of changes introduced to maintained ontologies. The precise definition of ontologies is provided, along with a definition of the ontology change log. A set of algorithms that allow revalidating ontology alignments have been built based on such elements.
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