Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task

Inference and domain knowledge are the foundation of a Knowledge-based System (KBS). Inference knowledge describes the steps or rules used to perform a task inference; making reference to the domain knowledge that is used. The inference knowledge is typically acquired from the domain experts and com...

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Main Authors: Halim, S.A., Annamalai, M., Ahmad, M.S., Ahmad, R.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://dspace.uniten.edu.my:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/353
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-3532017-07-30T22:14:58Z Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task Halim, S.A. Annamalai, M. Ahmad, M.S. Ahmad, R. Biological system modeling Decision making Expert systems Knowledge engineering Maintenance engineering Medical services Inference and domain knowledge are the foundation of a Knowledge-based System (KBS). Inference knowledge describes the steps or rules used to perform a task inference; making reference to the domain knowledge that is used. The inference knowledge is typically acquired from the domain experts and communicated to the system developers to be implemented in a KBS. The explicit representation of inference knowledge eases the maintenance of the evolving knowledge. However, the involvements of the knowledge engineers and software developers during the maintenance phase give cause to several problems during the system's life-cycle. In this paper, we provide a possible way of using rule templates to abstract away the inference knowledge to higher conceptual categories that are amenable to domain experts. Backed by a rule editing user-interface that is designed to instantiate the rule templates, the responsibility to maintain the inference knowledge can be assigned to the domain experts, i.e., the originators of the knowledge. The paper demonstrates the feasibility of the idea by making a case of inference knowledge applied to assessment task such as triage decision making. Five rule templates to represent the inference knowledge of assessment tasks are proposed. We validated the rule templates through case studies in several domains and task, as well as through usability testing. © 2015 IEEE. 2017-07-25T03:10:47Z 2017-07-25T03:10:47Z 2015 Conference Paper https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84961707830&doi=10.1109%2fICITCS.2015.7292974&partnerID=40&md5=af3dd819b7dc73eaaf9776c928947c97 http://dspace.uniten.edu.my:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/353 10.1109/ICITCS.2015.7292974 2-s2.0-84961707830 en 5th International Conference on IT Convergence and Security
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
language English
topic Biological system modeling
Decision making
Expert systems
Knowledge engineering
Maintenance engineering
Medical services
spellingShingle Biological system modeling
Decision making
Expert systems
Knowledge engineering
Maintenance engineering
Medical services
Halim, S.A.
Annamalai, M.
Ahmad, M.S.
Ahmad, R.
Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task
description Inference and domain knowledge are the foundation of a Knowledge-based System (KBS). Inference knowledge describes the steps or rules used to perform a task inference; making reference to the domain knowledge that is used. The inference knowledge is typically acquired from the domain experts and communicated to the system developers to be implemented in a KBS. The explicit representation of inference knowledge eases the maintenance of the evolving knowledge. However, the involvements of the knowledge engineers and software developers during the maintenance phase give cause to several problems during the system's life-cycle. In this paper, we provide a possible way of using rule templates to abstract away the inference knowledge to higher conceptual categories that are amenable to domain experts. Backed by a rule editing user-interface that is designed to instantiate the rule templates, the responsibility to maintain the inference knowledge can be assigned to the domain experts, i.e., the originators of the knowledge. The paper demonstrates the feasibility of the idea by making a case of inference knowledge applied to assessment task such as triage decision making. Five rule templates to represent the inference knowledge of assessment tasks are proposed. We validated the rule templates through case studies in several domains and task, as well as through usability testing. © 2015 IEEE.
format Conference Paper
author Halim, S.A.
Annamalai, M.
Ahmad, M.S.
Ahmad, R.
author_facet Halim, S.A.
Annamalai, M.
Ahmad, M.S.
Ahmad, R.
author_sort Halim, S.A.
title Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task
title_short Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task
title_full Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task
title_fullStr Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task
title_full_unstemmed Domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task
title_sort domain expert maintainable inference knowledge of assessment task
publishDate 2017
url http://dspace.uniten.edu.my:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/353
_version_ 1644492272591437824
score 13.222552