Short name of a vocabulary for lexical resources in the web of data
OntoLex is the short name of a vocabulary for lexical resources in the web of data (OntoLex-Lemon) and the short name of the W3C community group that created it (W3C Ontology-Lexica Community Group).[1]
OntoLex-Lemon vocabulary
The OntoLex-Lemon vocabulary represents a vocabulary for publishing lexical data as a knowledge graph, in an RDF format and/or as Linguistic Linked Open Data. Since its publication as a W3C Community report in 2016,[2] it serves as ``a de facto standard to represent ontology-lexica on the Web´´.[3] OntoLex-Lemon is a revision of the Lemon vocabulary originally proposed by McCrae et al. (2011).[4]
The core elements of OntoLex-Lemon, shown in Fig. 1, are:
lexical entry: unit of analysis of the lexicon, groups together one or more forms and one or more senses, resp. concepts. Can provide additional morphosyntactic information, e.g., one part of speech. Note that every lexical entry can have at most one part of speech, for representing groups of lexical entries with identical forms but different parts of speech, see the lexicography module.[5]
lexical form: surface form of a particular lexical entry, e.g., its written representation
lexical sense: word sense of a particular lexical entry. Note that a OntoLex-Lemon senses are lexicalized, i.e., they belong to exactly one lexical entry. For elements of meaning that can be expressed by different lexemes, use lexical concept.
lexical concept: elements of meaning with different lexicalizations. A typical example are WordNet synsets, where multiple synonymous words are grouped together in a single set.
The data structures of OntoLex-Lemon are comparable with those of other dictionary formats (see related vocabularies below). The innovative element about OntoLex-Lemon is that it provides such a data model as an RDF vocabulary, as this enables novel use cases that are based on web technologies rather than stand-alone dictionaries (e.g., translation inference, see applications below). For the foreseeable future, OntoLex-Lemon will also remain unique in this role, as the (Linguistic) Linked Open Data community strongly encourages to reuse existing vocabularies[7] and as of Dec 2019, OntoLex-Lemon is the only established (i.e., published by W3C or another standardization initiative) vocabulary for its purpose. This is also reflected in recent extensions to the original OntoLex-Lemon specification, where novel modules have been developed to extend the use of OntoLex-Lemon to novel areas of application:
OntoLex-Lemon Lexicography Module, published as a W3C Community Group Report,[8] extends OntoLex-Lemon with respect to requirements from digital lexicography.
OntoLex-Lemon Morphology Module, as of Dec 2019 under development,[9][10] aims to facilitate multilinguality with the formalization of morphological dictionaries in OntoLex-Lemon, esp., for morphologically rich languages
OntoLex-Lemon Module for Frequency, Attestation and Corpus Information, as of Dec 2019 under development,[11][12] aims to facilitate uses of OntoLex-Lemon in computational lexicography and natural language processing
Updates to LexInfo: LexInfo provides data categories for OntoLex-Lemon data. The current version is Lexinfo 3.0, older versions (prior to 2019) still depended on the older Monnet-Lemon vocabulary.[13]
Applications
OntoLex-Lemon is widely used for lexical resources in the context of Linguistic Linked Open Data. Selected applications include
OASIS Lexicographic Infrastructure Data Model and API (LEXIDMA), a framework for internationally interoperable lexicographic work[14]
European public multilingual knowledge infrastructure[15][16]
LexO, a collaborative web editor used for the creation and management of (multilingual) lexical and terminological resources as linked data resources[17]
VocBench, a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing ontologies, thesauri, lexicons and RDF data[18][19][20]
The Lexicala API by K Dictionaries that provides access to cross-lingual lexical data of 50 languages and 150 language pairs.[21]
DiTMAO, a lexicographic editor developed for creating the Dictionary of Old Occitan medico-botanical terminology[22]
a series of Shared Tasks on Translation Inference Across Dictionaries (TIAD-2017,[23][24] TIAD-2019,[25][26] TIAD-2020[27])
LiLa, a knowledge base of linguistic resources for Latin based on a large lexicon consisting of a collection of citation forms[35][36][37]
OntoLex development is regularly addressed in scientific events dedicated to ontologies, linked data or lexicography. Since 2017, a designated workshop series on the OntoLex module is conducted biannually.[38]
Related vocabularies
Related vocabularies that focus on standardizing and publishing lexical resources include DICT (text-based format), the XML Dictionary eXchange Format, TEI-Dict (XML) and the Lexical Markup Framework (abstract model usually serialized in XML; the Lemon vocabulary originally evolved from an RDF serialization of LMF). OntoLex-Lemon differs from these earlier models in being a native Linked Open Data vocabulary that does not (just) formalize structure and semantics of machine-readable dictionaries, but is designed to facilitate information integration between them.
^McCrae, John; Spohr, Dennis; Cimiano, Philipp (2011). "Linking lexical resources and ontologies on the Semantic Web with Lemon". Proceedings of the Extended Semantic Web Conference (ESWC-2011), Iraklion, Greece: 245–259.
^Fiorelli, Manuel; Stellato, Armando; McCrae, John P.; Cimiano, Philipp; Pazienza, Maria Teresa (2015). "LIME: The Metadata Module for OntoLex". In Gandon, Fabien; Sabou, Marta; Sack, Harald; d’Amato, Claudia; Cudré-Mauroux, Philippe; Zimmermann, Antoine (eds.). The Semantic Web. Latest Advances and New Domains. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 9088. Springer International Publishing. pp. 321–336. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-18818-8_20. ISBN978-3-319-18818-8.
^Schmitz, P.; Francesconi, E.; Hajlaoui, N.; Batouche, B.; Stellato, A. (2018). Semantic Interoperability of Multilingual Language Resources by Automatic Mapping, In: International Conference on Electronic Government and the Information Systems Perspective. Cham: Springer. pp. 153–163.
^Stellato, Armando; Rajbhandari, Sachit; Turbati, Andrea; Fiorelli, Manuel; Caracciolo, Caterina; Lorenzetti, Tiziano; Keizer, Johannes; Pazienza, Maria Teresa (2015). "VocBench: A Web Application for Collaborative Development of Multilingual Thesauri"(PDF). In Gandon, Fabien; Sabou, Marta; Sack, Harald; d’Amato, Claudia; Cudré-Mauroux, Philippe; Zimmermann, Antoine (eds.). The Semantic Web. Latest Advances and New Domains. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 9088. Springer International Publishing. pp. 38–53. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-18818-8_3. ISBN978-3-319-18818-8.