2002
@inproceedings{Stu2002,
vgclass = {refpap},
author = {Gerd Stumme},
title = {Formal Concept Analysis on Its Way from Mathematics to
Computer Science},
editor = {Uta Priss and Dan Corbett and Galia Angelova},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on
Conceptual Structures, (ICCS 2002)},
address = {Borovets, Bulgaria},
number = {2393},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
pages = {2--19},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
month = {July~15--19},
year = {2002},
url = {http://www.springerlink.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&issn=0302-9743&volume=2393&spage=2},
abstract = {In the last years, the main orientation of Formal Concept
Analysis (FCA) has turned from mathematics towards computer science.
This article provides a review of this new orientation and analyzes
why and how FCA and computer science attracted each other. It
discusses FCA as a knowledge representation formalism using five
knowledge representation principles provided by Davis, Shrobe, and
Szolovits [15]. It then studies how and why mathematics-based
researchers got attracted by computer science. We will argue for
continuing this trend by integrating the two research areas FCA and
Ontology Engineering.},
}