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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Nagowah, Soulakshmee D.a; * | Ben Sta, Hatemb | Gobin-Rahimbux, Babya
Affiliations: [a] Software and Information Systems Department, FoICDT, University of Mauritius, Réduit, Mauritius. E-mails: [email protected], [email protected] | [b] University of Tunis, Higher Institute of Management, SMART Lab, 41, Avenue de la Liberté, Cité Bouchoucha Le Bardo 2000, Tunis-Tunisia. E-mail: [email protected]
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected].
Note: [] Accepted by: Leo Obrst
Abstract: Smart communities have recently gained much attention. Researchers have been trying to tackle a number of challenges faced by smart communities. Interoperability is one key challenge that occurs due to different systems using different knowledge representations. To solve interoperability problems, ontologies are seen as a promising solution as they provide a commonly agreed vocabulary for representing data that are understandable by stakeholders of smart communities. Smart communities make use of Internet of Things (IoT) and ubiquitous networks to support communication among objects and devices in such environments. Smart campuses are examples of smart communities. Recently, many articles related to ontologies focusing on smart communities and smart campuses in IoT environments, have been published. This paper presents a Systematic Literature Review that has been conducted using Google Scholar. 18 ontologies for smart communities/smart campuses have been identified and analyzed out of 341 articles from year 2010 to 2019. The review classifies the ontologies in terms of domain, ontologies being reused, availability online, limitations, language adopted and coverage. It additionally discusses on the standards, the level of expressiveness, the ontology development approaches and methodologies adopted by the identified ontologies. Our analysis shows that the identified ontologies have been developed based on different ontological commitments. None of them have come up with a core semantic model that models different collaborating domains in a smart campus such as smart learning, smart management, smart governance, smart room, smart health, smart library and smart parking among others and that enhances cross-domain interoperability in a such an environment. Further details on our findings are presented and discussed in the paper.
Keywords: Smart campus, semantic models, ontologies, Internet of Things, interoperability
DOI: 10.3233/AO-200240
Journal: Applied Ontology, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 27-53, 2021
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