An Ontology of Socio-Cultural Time Expressions
Wennerberg, Pinar (Ludwig Maximillian University of Munich) | Schulz, Klaus (Ludwig Maximillian University of Munich)
Time is a concept that highly depends on the socio-cultural context. Its perception by humans is primarily based on the cultures, nations and social environment they belong to. Hence, different socio-cultural contexts imply different understandings of time. This leads to communication problems when their members start interacting with each other. In a dynamic and multi-cultural environment like today’s Web, where both billions of people with different socio-cultural contexts and numerous context dependent software applications interact, similar communication and inter-operability problems are expected. Expressing socio-cultural temporal information in an unambiguous, explicit and machine processable way can, however, help reduce such communication conflicts. In this way, heterogeneous temporal Web application systems can share the same concept of time. In this paper we present an ontology of socio-cultural time expressions that attempts to formalize the notion of socio-cultural time. The resulting model can then be used in a Web based temporal applications such as automated appointment scheduling services or calendars to provide more context sensitive service to its users.
Mar-22-2010