Database Design with Common Sense Business Reasoning and Learning

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Abstract

Automated database design systems embody knowledge about the database design process. However, their lack of knowledge about the domains for which databases are being developed significantly limits their usefulness. A methodology for acquiring and using general world knowledge about business for database design has been developed and implemented in a system called the Common Sense Business Reasoner, which acquires facts about application domains and organizes them into a hierarchical, context-dependent knowledge base. This knowledge is used to make intelligent suggestions to a user about the entities, attributes, and relationships to include in a database design. A distance function approach is employed for integrating specific facts, obtained from individual design sessions, into the knowledge base (learning) and for applying the knowledge to subsequent design problems (reasoning).

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Storey, V. C., Chiang, R. H. L., Dey, D., Goldstein, R. C., & Sundaresan, S. (1997). Database Design with Common Sense Business Reasoning and Learning. ACM Transactions on Database Systems, 22(4), 471–512. https://doi.org/10.1145/278245.278246

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