3,282 research outputs found
Reasoning & Querying – State of the Art
Various query languages for Web and Semantic Web data, both for practical use and as an area of research in the scientific community, have emerged in recent years. At the same time, the broad adoption of the internet where keyword search is used in many applications, e.g. search engines, has familiarized casual users with using keyword queries to retrieve information on the internet. Unlike this easy-to-use querying, traditional query languages require knowledge of the language itself as well as of the data to be queried. Keyword-based query languages for XML and RDF bridge the gap between the two, aiming at enabling simple querying of semi-structured data, which is relevant e.g. in the context of the emerging Semantic Web. This article presents an overview of the field of keyword querying for XML and RDF
Geographica: A Benchmark for Geospatial RDF Stores
Geospatial extensions of SPARQL like GeoSPARQL and stSPARQL have recently
been defined and corresponding geospatial RDF stores have been implemented.
However, there is no widely used benchmark for evaluating geospatial RDF stores
which takes into account recent advances to the state of the art in this area.
In this paper, we develop a benchmark, called Geographica, which uses both
real-world and synthetic data to test the offered functionality and the
performance of some prominent geospatial RDF stores
An introduction to Graph Data Management
A graph database is a database where the data structures for the schema
and/or instances are modeled as a (labeled)(directed) graph or generalizations
of it, and where querying is expressed by graph-oriented operations and type
constructors. In this article we present the basic notions of graph databases,
give an historical overview of its main development, and study the main current
systems that implement them
Four Lessons in Versatility or How Query Languages Adapt to the Web
Exposing not only human-centered information, but machine-processable data on the Web is one of the commonalities of recent Web trends. It has enabled a new kind of applications and businesses where the data is used in ways not foreseen by the data providers. Yet this exposition has fractured the Web into islands of data, each in different Web formats: Some providers choose XML, others RDF, again others JSON or OWL, for their data, even in similar domains. This fracturing stifles innovation as application builders have to cope not only with one Web stack (e.g., XML technology) but with several ones, each of considerable complexity. With Xcerpt we have developed a rule- and pattern based query language that aims to give shield application builders from much of this complexity: In a single query language XML and RDF data can be accessed, processed, combined, and re-published. Though the need for combined access to XML and RDF data has been recognized in previous work (including the W3C’s GRDDL), our approach differs in four main aspects: (1) We provide a single language (rather than two separate or embedded languages), thus minimizing the conceptual overhead of dealing with disparate data formats. (2) Both the declarative (logic-based) and the operational semantics are unified in that they apply for querying XML and RDF in the same way. (3) We show that the resulting query language can be implemented reusing traditional database technology, if desirable. Nevertheless, we also give a unified evaluation approach based on interval labelings of graphs that is at least as fast as existing approaches for tree-shaped XML data, yet provides linear time and space querying also for many RDF graphs. We believe that Web query languages are the right tool for declarative data access in Web applications and that Xcerpt is a significant step towards a more convenient, yet highly efficient data access in a “Web of Data”
Knowledge-infused and Consistent Complex Event Processing over Real-time and Persistent Streams
Emerging applications in Internet of Things (IoT) and Cyber-Physical Systems
(CPS) present novel challenges to Big Data platforms for performing online
analytics. Ubiquitous sensors from IoT deployments are able to generate data
streams at high velocity, that include information from a variety of domains,
and accumulate to large volumes on disk. Complex Event Processing (CEP) is
recognized as an important real-time computing paradigm for analyzing
continuous data streams. However, existing work on CEP is largely limited to
relational query processing, exposing two distinctive gaps for query
specification and execution: (1) infusing the relational query model with
higher level knowledge semantics, and (2) seamless query evaluation across
temporal spaces that span past, present and future events. These allow
accessible analytics over data streams having properties from different
disciplines, and help span the velocity (real-time) and volume (persistent)
dimensions. In this article, we introduce a Knowledge-infused CEP (X-CEP)
framework that provides domain-aware knowledge query constructs along with
temporal operators that allow end-to-end queries to span across real-time and
persistent streams. We translate this query model to efficient query execution
over online and offline data streams, proposing several optimizations to
mitigate the overheads introduced by evaluating semantic predicates and in
accessing high-volume historic data streams. The proposed X-CEP query model and
execution approaches are implemented in our prototype semantic CEP engine,
SCEPter. We validate our query model using domain-aware CEP queries from a
real-world Smart Power Grid application, and experimentally analyze the
benefits of our optimizations for executing these queries, using event streams
from a campus-microgrid IoT deployment.Comment: 34 pages, 16 figures, accepted in Future Generation Computer Systems,
October 27, 201
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