9,845 research outputs found
Abmash: Mashing Up Legacy Web Applications by Automated Imitation of Human Actions
Many business web-based applications do not offer applications programming
interfaces (APIs) to enable other applications to access their data and
functions in a programmatic manner. This makes their composition difficult (for
instance to synchronize data between two applications). To address this
challenge, this paper presents Abmash, an approach to facilitate the
integration of such legacy web applications by automatically imitating human
interactions with them. By automatically interacting with the graphical user
interface (GUI) of web applications, the system supports all forms of
integrations including bi-directional interactions and is able to interact with
AJAX-based applications. Furthermore, the integration programs are easy to
write since they deal with end-user, visual user-interface elements. The
integration code is simple enough to be called a "mashup".Comment: Software: Practice and Experience (2013)
LODE: Linking Digital Humanities Content to the Web of Data
Numerous digital humanities projects maintain their data collections in the
form of text, images, and metadata. While data may be stored in many formats,
from plain text to XML to relational databases, the use of the resource
description framework (RDF) as a standardized representation has gained
considerable traction during the last five years. Almost every digital
humanities meeting has at least one session concerned with the topic of digital
humanities, RDF, and linked data. While most existing work in linked data has
focused on improving algorithms for entity matching, the aim of the
LinkedHumanities project is to build digital humanities tools that work "out of
the box," enabling their use by humanities scholars, computer scientists,
librarians, and information scientists alike. With this paper, we report on the
Linked Open Data Enhancer (LODE) framework developed as part of the
LinkedHumanities project. With LODE we support non-technical users to enrich a
local RDF repository with high-quality data from the Linked Open Data cloud.
LODE links and enhances the local RDF repository without compromising the
quality of the data. In particular, LODE supports the user in the enhancement
and linking process by providing intuitive user-interfaces and by suggesting
high-quality linking candidates using tailored matching algorithms. We hope
that the LODE framework will be useful to digital humanities scholars
complementing other digital humanities tools
From Questions to Effective Answers: On the Utility of Knowledge-Driven Querying Systems for Life Sciences Data
We compare two distinct approaches for querying data in the context of the
life sciences. The first approach utilizes conventional databases to store the
data and intuitive form-based interfaces to facilitate easy querying of the
data. These interfaces could be seen as implementing a set of "pre-canned"
queries commonly used by the life science researchers that we study. The second
approach is based on semantic Web technologies and is knowledge (model) driven.
It utilizes a large OWL ontology and same datasets as before but associated as
RDF instances of the ontology concepts. An intuitive interface is provided that
allows the formulation of RDF triples-based queries. Both these approaches are
being used in parallel by a team of cell biologists in their daily research
activities, with the objective of gradually replacing the conventional approach
with the knowledge-driven one. This provides us with a valuable opportunity to
compare and qualitatively evaluate the two approaches. We describe several
benefits of the knowledge-driven approach in comparison to the traditional way
of accessing data, and highlight a few limitations as well. We believe that our
analysis not only explicitly highlights the specific benefits and limitations
of semantic Web technologies in our context but also contributes toward
effective ways of translating a question in a researcher's mind into precise
computational queries with the intent of obtaining effective answers from the
data. While researchers often assume the benefits of semantic Web technologies,
we explicitly illustrate these in practice
Combining textual and visual information processing for interactive video retrieval: SCHEMA's participation in TRECVID 2004
In this paper, the two different applications based on the Schema Reference System that were developed by the SCHEMA NoE for participation to the search task of TRECVID 2004 are illustrated. The first application, named ”Schema-Text”, is an interactive retrieval application that employs only textual information while the second one, named ”Schema-XM”, is an extension of the former, employing algorithms and
methods for combining textual, visual and higher level information. Two runs for each application were submitted, I A 2 SCHEMA-Text 3, I A 2 SCHEMA-Text 4 for Schema-Text and I A 2 SCHEMA-XM 1, I A 2 SCHEMA-XM 2 for Schema-XM. The comparison of these two applications in terms of retrieval efficiency revealed that the combination of information from different data sources can provide higher efficiency for retrieval systems. Experimental testing additionally revealed that initially performing a text-based query and subsequently proceeding with visual similarity search using one of the returned relevant keyframes as an example image is a good scheme for combining visual and textual information
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