Knitting the Semantic Web:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
[New York, NY]
Haworth Information Pr.
2007
|
Schriftenreihe: | Cataloging & classification quarterly
43,3/4 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Einzelaufnahme eines Zs.-Heftes |
Beschreibung: | XXIX, 239 S. graph. Darst. |
Internformat
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650 | 7 | |a Semantisch web |2 gtt | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Knitting the Semantic Web
Cataloging
&
Classification Quarterly
Volume
43,
Numbers
3/4
CONTENTS
About the Authors
xxiii
Introduction: Toward a More Library-Like Web via Semantic
Knitting
1
Jane
Greenberg
Eva Méndez
PART I: SEMANTIC WEB FOUNDATIONS, STANDARDS,
AND TOOLS
The Birth of the New Web: A Foucauldian Reading
of the Semantic Web
9
D. Grant Campbell
Foucault s
The Birth of the Clinic serves as a pattern
f o r
understanding the para¬
digm shifts represented by the Semantic Web.
Foucault
presents the history of medi¬
cal practice as a 3-stage sequence of transitions: from classiftcatory techniques to
clinical strategies, and then to anatomico-pathological strategies. In this paper, the
author removes these three stages both from their medical context and from
Foucault s
historical sequence, to produce a model for understanding information
organization in the context of the Semantic Web. We can extract from
Foucault s
theory a triadic relationship between three interpretive strategies, all of them de¬
fined by their different relationships to a textual body: classification, description,
and analysis.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web,
Foucault,
classification, discourse analysis
Library Cards for the
21
st Century
21
Charles McCathieNevile
Eva Méndez
This paper presents several reflections on the traditional card catalogues and
RDF {Resource Description Framework), which is the standard for creating the
Semantic Web, This work grew out of discussion between the authors after the Work¬
ing Group on Metadata Schemes meeting held at IFLA conference in Buenos Aires
(2004).
The paper provides an overview of RDF from the perspective ofcatalogu-
ers,
catalogues,
and library cards. The central theme of the discussion is resource
description as a discipline that could be based on RDF. RDF is explained as a very
simple grammar, using metadata and ontologies for semantic search and access. RDF
has ¡he ability to enhance
21st
century libraries and support metadata interoperability
in digital libraries, while maintaining tlte expressive power that was available to li¬
brarians when catalogues were physical artefacts.
KEYWORDS. RDF, resource description framework, Semantic Web, vocabular¬
ies, catalogues, library cards, bibliographic control, metadata interoperability
Library of Congress Controlled Vocabularies and Their
Application to the Semantic Web
47
Corey A. Harper
Barbara B.
Tille»
This article discusses how various controlled vocabularies, classification schemes,
and thesauri can serve as some of the building blocks of the Semantic Web. These
vocabularies have been developed over the course of decades, and can be put to
great use in the development of robust Web services and Semantic Web technolo¬
gies. The article covers how initial collaboration between the Semantic Web, Li¬
brary and Metadata communities are creating partnerships to complete work in
this area. It then discusses some core principles of authority control before talking
more specifically about subject and genre vocabularies and name authority. It is
hoped that future systems for internationally shared authority data will link the
world s authority data from trusted sources to benefit users worldwide. Finally,
the article looks at how encoding and markup of vocabularies can help ensure
compatibility with the current and future state of Semantic Web development and
provides examples of how this work can help improve thefindability and naviga¬
tion of information on the World Wide Web.
KEYWORDS. Controlled vocabularies, Semantic Web building blocks, authority
control
SKOS:
Simple Knowledge Organisation for the Web
69
Alistair Miles
José R.
Pérez-Agüera
This article introduces the Simple Knowledge Organisation System
(SKOS),
a Se¬
mantic Web language for representing controlled structured vocabularies, includ¬
ing thesauri, classification schemes, subject heading systems, and taxonomies.
SKOS
provides a framework for publishing thesauri, classification schemes, and
subject indexes on the Web, and for applying these systems to resource collections
that are part of the Semantic Web. Semantic Web applications may harvest and merge
SKOS
data, to integrate and enhance retrieval service across multiple collections
(e.g., libraries). This article also describes some alternatives for integrating Semantic
Web services based on the Resource Description Framework (RDF) and
SKOS
into
a distributed enterprise architecture.
KEYWORDS. Knowledge Organization Systems,
KOS,
taxonomies, thesauri,
classification schemes, glossaries, RDF, OWL, Semantic Web, Web services, soft¬
ware agents
Scheme
Versioning
in the Semantic Web
85
Joseph T. Tennis
This paper describes a conceptual framework and methodology for managing
scheme versioningforthe Semantic Web. The first part of the paper introduces the
concept of vocabulary encoding schemes, distinguished from metadata
schemas,
and discusses the characteristics of changes in schemes. The paper then presents a
proposal to use a value record-similar to a term record in thesaurus management
techniques-to manage scheme
versioning
challenges for the Semantic Web. The
conclusion identifies future research directions.
KEYWORDS. Indexing, classification,
versioning,
controlled vocabulary man¬
agement, indexing language management
Roles for Semantic Technologies and Tools in Libraries
105
G. Philip Rogers
Interest is growing in Semantic technologies such as XML XML Schema, ontologies,
and ontology languages, as well as in the tools that facilitate working with such tech¬
nologies. This paper examines the current library automation environment and
identifies semantic tools and technologies that might be suitable for use in some li¬
braries and other knowledge-intensive organizations.
KEYWORDS. Applications, software, Semantic Web, semantic tools, XML,
ontologies
PART II: SEMANTIC WEB PROJECTS AND PERSPECTIVES
RDF Database for PhysNet and Similar Portals
127
Thomas Severiens
Christian Thiemann
PhysNet (www.physnet.net) is a portal for Physics run since
1995
and continuously
being developed; it today uses an OWL-Lite ontology and mySQL database for storing
triples with the facts, such as department infonnation, postal addresses, GPS coordi¬
nates, URL· of publication repositories, etc. The article focuses on the structure and
the development of the underlying ontology; it also gives a detailed overview of an on¬
line web-based editorial tool, to maintain the facts database.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, RDF, ontology, OWL, world modeling, field-spe¬
cific portal
Biomedicine
and the Semantic Web: A Knowledge Model
for Visual Phenotype
149
John Michon
Semantic Web tools provide new and significant opportunities for organizing and
improving the utility of
biomedical
information. As librarians become more in¬
volved with
biomedical
infonnation, it is important for them, particularly catalogers,
to be part of research teams that are employing these techniques and developing a
high level interoperable
biomedical
infrastructure. To illustrate these principles,
we used Semantic Web tools to create a knowledge model for human visual pheno-
types (observable characteristics). This is an important foundation for generating
associations between genomics and clinical medicine. In turn this can allow cus¬
tomized medical therapies and provide insights into the molecular basis of disease.
The knowledge model incorporates a wide variety of clinical and genomic data in¬
cluding examination findings, demographics, laboratory tests, imaging, and vari¬
ations in
DNA
sequence. Information organization, storage and retrieval are
facilitated through the use of metadata and the ability to make computable state¬
ments in the visual science domain. This paper presents our work, discusses the
value of Semantic Web technologies in
biomedicine,
and identifies several impor¬
tant roles that library and information scientists can play in developing a more
powerful
biomedical
information infrastructure.
KEYWORDS. Ontologies,
biomedicine,
Semantic Web, personalized medicine
Towards an Infrastructure for Semantic Applications:
Methodologies for Semantic Integration of Heterogeneous
Resources
161
Anita C. Liang
Gauri Salokhe
Margherita
Sini
Johannes
Keizer
The semantic heterogeneity of Web information in the Agricultural domain pre¬
sents tremendous information retrieval challenges. This article presents work tak¬
ing place
al
the Food and Agriculture Organizations
(FAO)
that addresses this
challenge. Based on the analysis of resources in the domain of agriculture, this pa¬
per proposes (a) an application profile (AP) for dealing with the problem of heter¬
ogeneity originating from differences in terminologies, domain coverage, and
domain modelling, and (b) a root application ontology (AAO) based on the appli¬
cation profile which can serve as a basis for extending knowledge of the domain.
The paper explains how even a small investment in the enhancement of relation¬
ships among vocabularies, both metadata and domain-specific, yield a relatively
large return on investment.
KEYWORDS. Application profiles, information integration, information manage¬
ment, metadata, ontologies, semantic standards
FOAF: Connecting People on the Semantic Web
1
9
1
Mike Graves
Adam Constabaris
Dan Brickley
This article introduces the Friend Of A Friend (FOAF) vocabulary specification as
an example of a Semantic Web technology. A real world case study is presented in
which FOAF is used to solve several specific problems of identity management.
The main goal is to provide some basic theory behind the Semantic Web and then
attempt to ground that theory in a practical solution.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, FOAF, Friend Of A Friend, Social Networks
Advancing the Semantic Web via Library Functions
203
Jane
Greenberg
This article explores the applicability of primary library functions (collection de¬
velopment, cataloging, reference, and circulation) to the Semantic Web. The arti¬
cle defines the Semantic Web, identifies similarities between the library institution
and the Semantic Web, and presents research questions guiding the inquiry. The ar¬
ticle addresses each library function and demonstrates the applicability of each
function s policies to Semantic Web development. Results indicate that library func¬
tions are applicable to Semantic Web, with collection development translating to
Semantic Web selection
;
cataloging
translating to Semantic Web semantic
representation ; reference translating to Semantic Web service ; and circu¬
lation translating to Semantic Web resource use.
The last part of this article in¬
cludes a discussion about the lack of embrace between the library and the
Semantic Web communities, recommendations for reducing this gap, and conclu¬
sions.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, library functions, collection development, catalog¬
ing, reference, library outreach, circulation, Semantic Web planning and policies
Social Bibliography: A Personal Perspective on Libraries
and the Semantic Web
227
Stuart L.
Weibel
This paper presents a personal perspective on libraries and the Semantic Web.
The paper discusses computing power, increased availability of processable
text, social software developments and the ideas underlying Web
2.0
and the
impact of these developments in the context of libraries and information. The
article concludes with a discussion of social bibliography and the declining he¬
gemony of catalog records, and emphasizes the strengths of librarianship and
the profession s ability to contribute to Semantic Web development.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, Web
2.0,
Library
2.0,
social software, social bibli¬
ography
BOOK REVIEW
Multimedia Content and the Semantic Web,
edited by Giorgos Stamou and
Stefanos Kollias 237
Reviewed by Carlos Leal
|
adam_txt |
Knitting the Semantic Web
Cataloging
&
Classification Quarterly
Volume
43,
Numbers
3/4
CONTENTS
About the Authors
xxiii
Introduction: Toward a More Library-Like Web via Semantic
Knitting
1
Jane
Greenberg
Eva Méndez
PART I: SEMANTIC WEB FOUNDATIONS, STANDARDS,
AND TOOLS
The Birth of the New Web: A Foucauldian Reading
of the Semantic Web
9
D. Grant Campbell
Foucault's
The Birth of the Clinic serves as a pattern
f o r
understanding the para¬
digm shifts represented by the Semantic Web.
Foucault
presents the history of medi¬
cal practice as a 3-stage sequence of transitions: from classiftcatory techniques to
clinical strategies, and then to anatomico-pathological strategies. In this paper, the
author removes these three stages both from their medical context and from
Foucault's
historical sequence, to produce a model for understanding information
organization in the context of the Semantic Web. We can extract from
Foucault's
theory a triadic relationship between three interpretive strategies, all of them de¬
fined by their different relationships to a textual body: classification, description,
and analysis.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web,
Foucault,
classification, discourse analysis
Library Cards for the
21
st Century
21
Charles McCathieNevile
Eva Méndez
This paper presents several reflections on the traditional card catalogues and
RDF {Resource Description Framework), which is "the" standard for creating the
Semantic Web, This work grew out of discussion between the authors after the Work¬
ing Group on Metadata Schemes meeting held at IFLA conference in Buenos Aires
(2004).
The paper provides an overview of RDF from the perspective ofcatalogu-
ers,
catalogues,
and library cards. The central theme of the discussion is resource
description as a discipline that could be based on RDF. RDF is explained as a very
simple grammar, using metadata and ontologies for semantic search and access. RDF
has ¡he ability to enhance
21st
century libraries and support metadata interoperability
in digital libraries, while maintaining tlte expressive power that was available to li¬
brarians when catalogues were physical artefacts.
KEYWORDS. RDF, resource description framework, Semantic Web, vocabular¬
ies, catalogues, library cards, bibliographic control, metadata interoperability
Library of Congress Controlled Vocabularies and Their
Application to the Semantic Web
47
Corey A. Harper
Barbara B.
Tille»
This article discusses how various controlled vocabularies, classification schemes,
and thesauri can serve as some of the building blocks of the Semantic Web. These
vocabularies have been developed over the course of decades, and can be put to
great use in the development of robust Web services and Semantic Web technolo¬
gies. The article covers how initial collaboration between the Semantic Web, Li¬
brary and Metadata communities are creating partnerships to complete work in
this area. It then discusses some core principles of authority control before talking
more specifically about subject and genre vocabularies and name authority. It is
hoped that future systems for internationally shared authority data will link the
world's authority data from trusted sources to benefit users worldwide. Finally,
the article looks at how encoding and markup of vocabularies can help ensure
compatibility with the current and future state of Semantic Web development and
provides examples of how this work can help improve thefindability and naviga¬
tion of information on the World Wide Web.
KEYWORDS. Controlled vocabularies, Semantic Web building blocks, authority
control
SKOS:
Simple Knowledge Organisation for the Web
69
Alistair Miles
José R.
Pérez-Agüera
This article introduces the Simple Knowledge Organisation System
(SKOS),
a Se¬
mantic Web language for representing controlled structured vocabularies, includ¬
ing thesauri, classification schemes, subject heading systems, and taxonomies.
SKOS
provides a framework for publishing thesauri, classification schemes, and
subject indexes on the Web, and for applying these systems to resource collections
that are part of the Semantic Web. Semantic Web applications may harvest and merge
SKOS
data, to integrate and enhance retrieval service across multiple collections
(e.g., libraries). This article also describes some alternatives for integrating Semantic
Web services based on the Resource Description Framework (RDF) and
SKOS
into
a distributed enterprise architecture.
KEYWORDS. Knowledge Organization Systems,
KOS,
taxonomies, thesauri,
classification schemes, glossaries, RDF, OWL, Semantic Web, Web services, soft¬
ware agents
Scheme
Versioning
in the Semantic Web
85
Joseph T. Tennis
This paper describes a conceptual framework and methodology for managing
scheme versioningforthe Semantic Web. The first part of the paper introduces the
concept of vocabulary encoding schemes, distinguished from metadata
schemas,
and discusses the characteristics of changes in schemes. The paper then presents a
proposal to use a value record-similar to a term record in thesaurus management
techniques-to manage scheme
versioning
challenges for the Semantic Web. The
conclusion identifies future research directions.
KEYWORDS. Indexing, classification,
versioning,
controlled vocabulary man¬
agement, indexing language management
Roles for Semantic Technologies and Tools in Libraries
105
G. Philip Rogers
Interest is growing in Semantic technologies such as XML XML Schema, ontologies,
and ontology languages, as well as in the tools that facilitate working with such tech¬
nologies. This paper examines the current library automation environment and
identifies semantic tools and technologies that might be suitable for use in some li¬
braries and other knowledge-intensive organizations.
KEYWORDS. Applications, software, Semantic Web, semantic tools, XML,
ontologies
PART II: SEMANTIC WEB PROJECTS AND PERSPECTIVES
RDF Database for PhysNet and Similar Portals
127
Thomas Severiens
Christian Thiemann
PhysNet (www.physnet.net) is a portal for Physics run since
1995
and continuously
being developed; it today uses an OWL-Lite ontology and mySQL database for storing
triples with the facts, such as department infonnation, postal addresses, GPS coordi¬
nates, URL· of publication repositories, etc. The article focuses on the structure and
the development of the underlying ontology; it also gives a detailed overview of an on¬
line web-based editorial tool, to maintain the facts database.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, RDF, ontology, OWL, world modeling, field-spe¬
cific portal
Biomedicine
and the Semantic Web: A Knowledge Model
for Visual Phenotype
149
John Michon
Semantic Web tools provide new and significant opportunities for organizing and
improving the utility of
biomedical
information. As librarians become more in¬
volved with
biomedical
infonnation, it is important for them, particularly catalogers,
to be part of research teams that are employing these techniques and developing a
high level interoperable
biomedical
infrastructure. To illustrate these principles,
we used Semantic Web tools to create a knowledge model for human visual pheno-
types (observable characteristics). This is an important foundation for generating
associations between genomics and clinical medicine. In turn this can allow cus¬
tomized medical therapies and provide insights into the molecular basis of disease.
The knowledge model incorporates a wide variety of clinical and genomic data in¬
cluding examination findings, demographics, laboratory tests, imaging, and vari¬
ations in
DNA
sequence. Information organization, storage and retrieval are
facilitated through the use of metadata and the ability to make computable state¬
ments in the visual science domain. This paper presents our work, discusses the
value of Semantic Web technologies in
biomedicine,
and identifies several impor¬
tant roles that library and information scientists can play in developing a more
powerful
biomedical
information infrastructure.
KEYWORDS. Ontologies,
biomedicine,
Semantic Web, personalized medicine
Towards an Infrastructure for Semantic Applications:
Methodologies for Semantic Integration of Heterogeneous
Resources
161
Anita C. Liang
Gauri Salokhe
Margherita
Sini
Johannes
Keizer
The semantic heterogeneity of Web information in the Agricultural domain pre¬
sents tremendous information retrieval challenges. This article presents work tak¬
ing place
al
the Food and Agriculture Organizations
(FAO)
that addresses this
challenge. Based on the analysis of resources in the domain of agriculture, this pa¬
per proposes (a) an application profile (AP) for dealing with the problem of heter¬
ogeneity originating from differences in terminologies, domain coverage, and
domain modelling, and (b) a root application ontology (AAO) based on the appli¬
cation profile which can serve as a basis for extending knowledge of the domain.
The paper explains how even a small investment in the enhancement of relation¬
ships among vocabularies, both metadata and domain-specific, yield a relatively
large return on investment.
KEYWORDS. Application profiles, information integration, information manage¬
ment, metadata, ontologies, semantic standards
FOAF: Connecting People on the Semantic Web
1
9
1
Mike Graves
Adam Constabaris
Dan Brickley
This article introduces the Friend Of A Friend (FOAF) vocabulary specification as
an example of a Semantic Web technology. A real world case study is presented in
which FOAF is used to solve several specific problems of identity management.
The main goal is to provide some basic theory behind the Semantic Web and then
attempt to ground that theory in a practical solution.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, FOAF, Friend Of A Friend, Social Networks
Advancing the Semantic Web via Library Functions
203
Jane
Greenberg
This article explores the applicability of primary library functions (collection de¬
velopment, cataloging, reference, and circulation) to the Semantic Web. The arti¬
cle defines the Semantic Web, identifies similarities between the library institution
and the Semantic Web, and presents research questions guiding the inquiry. The ar¬
ticle addresses each library function and demonstrates the applicability of each
function's policies to Semantic Web development. Results indicate that library func¬
tions are applicable to Semantic Web, with "collection development" translating to
"Semantic Web selection
";
"cataloging
"
translating to "Semantic Web 'semantic
'
representation"; "reference" translating to "Semantic Web service"; and circu¬
lation translating to "Semantic Web resource use.
"
The last part of this article in¬
cludes a discussion about the lack of embrace between the library and the
Semantic Web communities, recommendations for reducing this gap, and conclu¬
sions.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, library functions, collection development, catalog¬
ing, reference, library outreach, circulation, Semantic Web planning and policies
Social Bibliography: A Personal Perspective on Libraries
and the Semantic Web
227
Stuart L.
Weibel
This paper presents a personal perspective on libraries and the Semantic Web.
The paper discusses computing power, increased availability of processable
text, social software developments and the ideas underlying Web
2.0
and the
impact of these developments in the context of libraries and information. The
article concludes with a discussion of social bibliography and the declining he¬
gemony of catalog records, and emphasizes the strengths of librarianship and
the profession's ability to contribute to Semantic Web development.
KEYWORDS. Semantic Web, Web
2.0,
Library
2.0,
social software, social bibli¬
ography
BOOK REVIEW
Multimedia Content and the Semantic Web,
edited by Giorgos Stamou and
Stefanos Kollias 237
Reviewed by Carlos Leal |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV035007686 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T21:42:48Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:20:04Z |
institution | BVB |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016676984 |
oclc_num | 157037531 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-188 |
physical | XXIX, 239 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Haworth Information Pr. |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Cataloging & classification quarterly |
spelling | Knitting the Semantic Web Jane Greenberg ..., guest ed. [New York, NY] Haworth Information Pr. 2007 XXIX, 239 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Cataloging & classification quarterly 43,3/4 Einzelaufnahme eines Zs.-Heftes Bibliotheken gtt Semantisch web gtt Libraries and the Internet Semantic Web Semantic Web (DE-588)4688372-1 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Semantic Web (DE-588)4688372-1 s DE-604 Greenberg, Jane Sonstige oth Digitalisierung BSBMuenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016676984&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Knitting the Semantic Web Bibliotheken gtt Semantisch web gtt Libraries and the Internet Semantic Web Semantic Web (DE-588)4688372-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4688372-1 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Knitting the Semantic Web |
title_auth | Knitting the Semantic Web |
title_exact_search | Knitting the Semantic Web |
title_exact_search_txtP | Knitting the Semantic Web |
title_full | Knitting the Semantic Web Jane Greenberg ..., guest ed. |
title_fullStr | Knitting the Semantic Web Jane Greenberg ..., guest ed. |
title_full_unstemmed | Knitting the Semantic Web Jane Greenberg ..., guest ed. |
title_short | Knitting the Semantic Web |
title_sort | knitting the semantic web |
topic | Bibliotheken gtt Semantisch web gtt Libraries and the Internet Semantic Web Semantic Web (DE-588)4688372-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Bibliotheken Semantisch web Libraries and the Internet Semantic Web Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016676984&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT greenbergjane knittingthesemanticweb |