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It

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It s all semantics! The premises and promises of the semantic web. Tony Ross Centre for Digital Library Research, University of Strathclyde Email: anthony.ross_at_ ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: It


1
Its all semantics! The premises and promises of
the semantic web.
  • Tony Ross
  • Centre for Digital Library Research,
  • University of Strathclyde
  • Email anthony.ross_at_strath.ac.uk

2
What is the Semantic Web?
The Semantic Web is not a separate Web but an
extension of the current one, in which
information is given well-defined meaning, better
enabling computers and people to work in
co-operation. (Berners-Lee et al., 2001)
There is realization now, It's not the
documents, it is the things they are about which
are important. Obvious, really. (Berners-Lee,
2007)
3
The Semantic Web basic ideas 1
  • The Web evolved largely as a platform for the
    linking and sharing of documents.
  • Simplicity was key.
  • A largely syntactic rather than semantic
    framework.
  • Hence browsers display data without actually
    being aware of its meaning.

4
The Semantic Web basic ideas 2
  • Currently, intermediate programmes must be built
    to allow interoperability between specific
    programmes.
  • E.g. Insurance price comparison sites
  • Web data is controlled by applications the
    structure and format of that data is therefore
    particular rather than universal.
  • Wouldnt it be better if machines were able to
    interpret and process the content of documents?

5
The Semantic Web basic ideas 3
Q. How can automated technologies deal with subjectivity of language (e.g. context, intention, tone, etc.) or linguistic quirks (homonymy, synonymy, etc.)? A. Only if we (humans) explicitly mark them up as such
  • But, this will require a lot of metadata and a
    lot of accompanying mark up!
  • Plus a lot of common infrastructural services and
    standards of application

6
Building a common framework
  • Its the same old problem for cataloguing and
    indexing, i.e. We need to ensure we are
    describing things in the same way!
  • We must register (and thus control)
    vocabularies services names, etc.
  • And construct (and agree upon) common frameworks
    for the way such metadata is to be applied.

7
The NSDL Metadata Registry
  • Aims to make possible
  • the unambiguous identification of metadata
    schemas (attribute spaces or element/property
    sets) and schemes (value spaces or controlled
    vocabularies)
  • the machine declaration for encoding those
    schemes and schemas and
  • the publication of those schemes and schemas to
    communities and applications (Hillmann et al,
    2006)

8
Metadata Registries
  • Provide a common, openly-accessible site for the
    registration of metadata schema.
  • Thus, a locally produced vocabulary e.g. JISC
    IE Vocabulary is remotely accessible to all.
  • This means it can be referred to and reused both
    within JISC and across communities.
  • Promotes interoperability!

9
eXtensible Markup Language (XML)
  • Enables users to annotate (markup) documents with
    their own locally-defined elements.
  • The document then points to a location for the
    declaration of schema format a namespace
  • Other users and other documents can then use
    these elements and point to the namespace

10
Resource Description Framework (RDF) 1
  • Official W3C recommendation
  • Published 2004
  • Result of work by the RDF Core Working Group

11
Resource Description Framework (RDF) 2
  • A framework to allow commonly interpretable
    specifications of relations
  • Simple logical assertions based on
  • subject predicate object
  • e.g. Document A has title Romeo and
    Juliet
  • Thus, semantic metadata can be attached to a
    document (as XML). The meaning of a document
    becomes machine processable.

12
Resource Description Framework (RDF) 3
  • RDF doesnt itself specify attributes or
    vocabularies it is an enabling framework
  • Hence it can be used in conjunction with emergent
    standards such as RDFS, OWL, FOAF, SKOS, Dublin
    Core.

13
Simple Knowledge Organisation Systems (SKOS) 1
  • Has W3C Working Draft status
  • SKOS-Core Guide published 2005
  • Developed to allow expression of the basic
    structure of controlled vocabularies (thesauri,
    classification schemes, subject heading lists,
    taxonomies, folksonomies, etc.)

14
Simple Knowledge Organisation Systems (SKOS) 2
  • Divides (5) classes of resources
  • skosConceptScheme
  • skosConcept
  • And sub-divides (26) properties of that class
  • skosPreflabel
  • skosBroader

15
Demonstration
  • The JISC Information Environment vocabulary,
    developed in support of CDLR project Resource
    Discovery iKit
  • As declared using the NSDL Metadata Registry

16
JISC Information Environment
17
(No Transcript)
18
Persistence the responsibilities of ownership
  • In order for this to work, we need stable
    indicators reliably pointing to resources.
  • The responsibilities of ownership who will
    assume responsibility for issues such as
    persistence, security, version control funding
    becomes an issue (especially as project-funding
    dries up).
  • DDC has OCLC, LCSH has LoC, AAT has Getty, etc.

19
Metadata Registry
  • http//www.metadataregistry.org

20
References
  • Hillmann, D., Phipps, J., Sutton, S.A. and
    Laundry, R. (2006). A metadata registry from the
    vocabularies up the NSDL Registry project.
  • Berners-Lee, T., Hendler, J. and Lasilla, O.
    (2001). The Semantic Web. Scientific American.
    284(5).
  • Berners-Lee, T. (2007). timbl's blog Giant
    Global Graph. Posted 21st November 2007.
    Available http//dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/no
    de/215
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