Newsroom

Arity announces Semantic Studio

Arity's new product Semantic Studio is a semantic search engine that mines the meaning from resources by using lexicons, ontologies, natural language processing, and context cues.

Arity chosen as a 2009 SIIA innovative company

Arity Corporation was chosen from among hundreds of entries to present at the Software and Information Industry Association Previews program.  Presenters are chosen for their innovation, ingenuity, and other qualities that point toward success.

Arity announces 2008 partnership with Elsevier

Arity has begun a partnership with Elsevier. The first outcome is the production of a taxonomy/ontology inferred from a corpus of Elsevier journals, books and other reference material.

Arity presents paper at 2006 International Semantic Web Conference

In collaboration with Syngenta's Keith Allen, Head of Computational Biology, Arity's Peter Gabel co-wrote and made a presentation at the International Semantic Web Conference’s Health Care and Life Sciences Workshop. The presentation was a discussion of techniques used to compare genetic similarities with the goal of producing a more oil productive strain of Brassica Napus.

Arity announces release of LexiLink version 1.1

LexiLink, the poly-ontology and vocabulary management system is now available for sale. The magic of LexiLink is this: When you assemble a new lexicon that draws relevant parts from existing lexicons and ontologies to meet a particular need, LexiLink manages the provenance of concepts and attributes and alerts you to specific changes in source lexicons that are relevant to you. This allows you to quickly absorb changes and new versions directly into your new lexicon.

Arity presents paper at 2005 European Conference on Computational Biology

In collaboration with Pfizer, Arity's Peter Gabel and Pamela Schaepe co-wrote and presented a paper describing the techniques and value proposition of the Poly-Ontology and Applied Ontology approach to biomedical research and knowledge management.

Arity Developing Software Tools for Pfizer Early Drug Discovery Processes

At an average of $800M, as estimated by a recent Tufts University study, to bring a drug from study compound to market viability, risk assessment and the associated challenges to managing pathogenesis and compound knowledge is an enormous undertaking. The FDA has suggested, in its recent report Stagnation or Innovation * that the process will become more efficient when the assembly of existing data on biomarkers and the identification of data gaps or remaining uncertainties is addressed through inventive and thorough approaches.

Working with Pfizer and its Safety Sciences Group, Arity Corporation is developing a novel software application called @tlas. Arity believes this application will facilitate research, enhance productivity, shorten review cycles and increase confidence in safety. The application is a suite of integrated products that will focus on more robust identification of potential risks.

@tlas provides a context for individual scientists to perform, refine and record their literature and study notes; supporting conceptual ontologies, an automated approach to reasoning, making suggestions based on analogies across programs, and using rules-based reasoning.

Arity creates Content Management Application for Eastman-Kodak’s Service and Support Division at Qualex

Kodak's subsidiary Qualex contracted with Arity Corporation to create version 2.0 of their authoring environment for diagnosing issues with their wide range of traditional and digital photo processing machines. Arity's software provides a flow-charting tool for easy content entry including multiple choice options and addition of illustrative images.

The software also provides multi-user workflow and domain knowledge modeling. This is the first step in Qualex's move toward creation of a Diagnostic Wizard to provide thorough, robust and user friendly support for phone customers as well as online customers.

Arity's Prolog Exceeds Expectations.

Arity/Prolog32, the world's best selling version of Prolog, has a customer base of over 15,000 in 55 countries worldwide. Prolog is popular for its prowess for knowledge representation and reasoning applications and natural language processing applications.