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Dive into the research topics where Boris Villazón-Terrazas is active.

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Featured researches published by Boris Villazón-Terrazas.


Archive | 2011

Methodological Guidelines for Publishing Government Linked Data

Boris Villazón-Terrazas; Luis M. Vilches-Blázquez; Oscar Corcho; Asunción Gómez-Pérez

Publishing Government Linked Data (and Linked Data in general) is a process that involves a high number of steps, design decisions and technologies. Although some initial guidelines have been already provided by Linked Data publishers, these are still far from covering all the steps that are necessary (from data source selection to publication) or giving enough details about all these steps, technologies, intermediate products, etc. In this chapter we propose a set of methodological guidelines for the activities involved within this process. These guidelines are the result of our experience in the production of Linked Data in several Governmental contexts. We validate these guidelines with the GeoLinkedData and AEMETLinkedData use cases.


international world wide web conferences | 2006

Ontology-based legal information retrieval to improve the information access in e-government

Asunción Gómez-Pérez; Fernando Ortiz-Rodríguez; Boris Villazón-Terrazas

In this paper, we present EgoIR, an approach for retrieving legal information based on ontologies; this approach has been developed with Legal Ontologies to be deployed within the e-government context.


advances in geographic information systems | 2010

GeoLinked data and INSPIRE through an application case

Luis M. Vilches-Blázquez; Boris Villazón-Terrazas; Victor Saquicela; Alexander de León; Oscar Corcho; Asunción Gómez-Pérez

In this paper we present the process that has been followed for the development of an application that makes use of several heterogeneous Spanish public datasets that are related to three themes of INSPIRE Directive, specifically Administrative Units, Hydrography, and Statistical Units. Our application aims at analysing existing relations between the Spanish coastal area and different statistical variables such as population, unemployment, dwelling, industry, and building trade. Besides providing methodological guidelines for the generation, publishing and exploitation of Linked Data from such datasets, we provide an important innovation with respect to other similar processes followed in other initiatives by dealing with the geometrical information of features.


Semantic Web archive | 2013

Transforming meteorological data into Linked Data

Ghislain Auguste Atemezing; Oscar Corcho; Daniel Garijo; Jose Mora; María Poveda-Villalón; Pablo Rozas; Daniel Vila-Suero; Boris Villazón-Terrazas

We describe the AEMET meteorological dataset, which makes available some data sources from the Agencia Estatal de Meteorologia AEMET, Spanish Meteorological Office as Linked Data. The data selected for publication are generated every ten minutes by approximately 250 automatic weather stations deployed across Spain and made available as CSV files in the AEMET FTP server. These files are retrieved from the server, processed with Python scripts, transformed to RDF according to an ontology network which reuses the W3C SSN Ontology, published in a triple store and visualized using Map4RDF.


OTM '09 Proceedings of the Confederated International Conferences, CoopIS, DOA, IS, and ODBASE 2009 on On the Move to Meaningful Internet Systems: Part II | 2009

How to Write and Use the Ontology Requirements Specification Document

Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa; Asunción Gómez-Pérez; Boris Villazón-Terrazas

The goal of the ontology requirements specification activity is to state why the ontology is being built, what its intended uses are, who the end-users are, and which requirements the ontology should fulfill. The novelty of this paper lies in the systematization of the ontology requirements specification activity since the paper proposes detailed methodological guidelines for specifying ontology requirements efficiently. These guidelines will help ontology engineers to capture ontology requirements and produce the ontology requirements specification document (ORSD). The ORSD will play a key role during the ontology development process because it facilitates, among other activities, (1) the search and reuse of existing knowledge-aware resources with the aim of re-engineering them into ontologies, (2) the search and reuse of existing ontological resources (ontologies, ontology modules, ontology statements as well as ontology design patterns), and (3) the verification of the ontology along the ontology development. In parallel to the guidelines, we present the ORSD that resulted from the ontology requirements specification activity within the SEEMP project, and how this document facilitated not only the reuse of existing knowledge-aware resources but also the verification of the SEEMP ontologies. Moreover, we present some use cases in which the methodological guidelines proposed here were applied.


CAEPIA'05 Proceedings of the 11th Spanish association conference on Current Topics in Artificial Intelligence | 2005

Legal ontologies for the spanish e-government

Asunción Gómez-Pérez; Fernando Ortiz-Rodríguez; Boris Villazón-Terrazas

The Electronic Government is a new field of applications for the semantic web where ontologies are becoming an important research technology. The e-Government faces considerable challenges to achieve interoperability given the semantic differences of interpretation, complexity and width of scope. In this paper we present the results obtained in an ongoing project commissioned by the Spanish government that seeks strategies for the e-Government to reduce the problems encountered when delivering services to citizens. We also introduce an e-Government ontology model; within this model a set of legal ontologies are devoted to representing the Real-estate transaction domain used to illustrate this paper.


international conference on semantic systems | 2010

Geographical linked data: a Spanish use case

Alexander de León; Victor Saquicela; Luis M. Vilches; Boris Villazón-Terrazas; Freddy Priyatna; Oscar Corcho

We present the process that has been followed for the development of an application that makes use of several heterogeneous Spanish public datasets that are related to administrative, hydrographic, and statistical domains. Our application aims at analysing existing relations between the Spanish coastal area and different statistical variables such as unemployment, population, dwelling, industry, and building trade. Moreover, we provide an important innovation with respect to other similar processes followed in other initiatives by dealing with the geometrical information of features.


International Journal of Digital Earth | 2014

Integrating geographical information in the Linked Digital Earth

Luis M. Vilches-Blázquez; Boris Villazón-Terrazas; Oscar Corcho; Asunción Gómez-Pérez

Many progresses have been made since the Digital Earth notion was envisioned thirteen years ago. However, the mechanism for integrating geographic information into the Digital Earth is still quite limited. In this context, we have developed a process to generate, integrate and publish geospatial Linked Data from several Spanish National data-sets. These data-sets are related to four Infrastructure for Spatial Information in the European Community (INSPIRE) themes, specifically with Administrative units, Hydrography, Statistical units, and Meteorology. Our main goal is to combine different sources (heterogeneous, multidisciplinary, multitemporal, multiresolution, and multilingual) using Linked Data principles. This goal allows the overcoming of current problems of information integration and driving geographical information toward the next decade scenario, that is, ‘Linked Digital Earth.’


Expert Systems With Applications | 2011

A network of ontology networks for building e-employment advanced systems ☆

Boris Villazón-Terrazas; Jaime Ramírez; Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa; Asunción Gómez-Pérez

This paper presents the development of a network of ontology networks that enables data mediation between the Employment Services (ESs) participating in a semantic interoperability platform for the exchange of Curricula Vitae (CVs) and job offers in different languages. Such network is formed by (1) a set of local ontology networks that are language dependent, in which each network represents the local and particular view that each ES has of the employment market; and (2) a reference ontology network developed in English that represents a standardized and agreed upon terminology of the European employment market. In this network each local ontology network is aligned with the reference ontology network so that search queries, CVs, and job offers can be mediated through these alignments from any ES. The development of the ontologies has followed the methodological guidelines issued by the NeOn Methodology and is focused mainly on scenarios that involve reusing and re-engineering knowledge resources already agreed upon by employment experts and standardization bodies. This paper explains how these methodological guidelines have been applied for building e-employment ontologies. In addition, it shows that the approach to building ontologies by reusing and re-engineering agreed upon non-ontological resources speeds the ontology development, reduces development costs, and retrieves knowledge already agreed upon by a community of people in a more formal representation.


asian semantic web conference | 2008

A Pattern Based Approach for Re-engineering Non-Ontological Resources into Ontologies

Andrés García-Silva; Asunción Gómez-Pérez; Mari Carmen Suárez-Figueroa; Boris Villazón-Terrazas

With the goal of speeding up the ontology development process, ontology engineers are starting to reuse as much as possible available ontologies and non-ontological resources such as classification schemes, thesauri, lexicons and folksonomies, that already have some degree of consensus. The reuse of such non-ontological resources necessarily involves their re-engineering into ontologies. Non-ontological resources are highly heterogeneous in their data model and contents: they encode different types of knowledge, and they can be modeled and implemented in different ways. In this paper we present (1) a typology for non-ontological resources, (2) a pattern based approach for re-engineering non-ontological resources into ontologies, and (3) a use case of the proposed approach.

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Asunción Gómez-Pérez

Technical University of Madrid

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Oscar Corcho

Technical University of Madrid

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Jaime Ramírez

Technical University of Madrid

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Daniel Vila-Suero

Technical University of Madrid

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Freddy Priyatna

Technical University of Madrid

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Alexander de León

Technical University of Madrid

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Daniel Garijo

Technical University of Madrid

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