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UT Linked Data Informal Learning Discussion Series Bibliography
The following bibliographies were created as part of the UT Linked Data Informal Learning Discussion Series hosted at UT LibrariesThe following bibliographies were created as part of the UT Linked Data Informal Learning Discussion Series hosted at UT LibrariesUT Librarie
Tabulator Redux: writing Into the Semantic Web
A first category of Semantic Web browsers were designed to present a given dataset (an RDF graph) for perusal, in various forms. These include mSpace, Exhibit, and to a certain extent Haystack. A second category tackled mechanisms and display issues around linked data gathered on the fly. These include Tabulator, Oink, Disco, Open Link Software's Data Browser, and Object Browser. The challenge of once that data is gathered, how might it be edited, extended and annotated has so far been left largely unaddressed. This is not surprising: there are a number of steep challenges for determining how to support editing information in the open web of linked data. These include the representation of both the web of documents and the web of things, and the relationships between them; ensuring the user is aware of and has control over the social context such as licensing and privacy of data being entered, and, on a web in which anyone can say anything about anything, helping the user intuitively select the things which they actually wish to see in a given situation. There is also the view update problem: the difficulty of reflecting user edits back through functions used to map web data to a screen presentation. In the latest version of the Tabulator project, described in this paper we have focused on providing the write side of the readable/writable web. Our approach has been to allow modification and addition of information naturally within the browsing interface, and to relay changes to the server triple by triple for least possible brittleness (there is no explicit 'save' operation). Challenges which remain include the propagation of changes by collaborators back to the interface to create a shared editing system. To support writing across (semantic) Web resources, our work has contributed several technologies, including a HTTP/SPARQL/Update-based protocol between an editor (or other system) and incrementally editable resources stored in an open source, world-writable 'data wiki'. This begins enabling the writable Semantic Web
Rough-bed flows in geophysical, environmental, and engineering systems : Double-Averaging Approach and its applications. Preface to the Special Issue
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
New mobilities across the lifecourse: a framework for analysing demographically-linked drivers of migration
Migration, along with fertility and mortality, is one of the fundamental drivers of population change. Taking the lifecourse as the central concern, the authors set out a theoretical framework and define some key research questions for a programme of research that explores how the linked lives of mobile people are situated in time-space within the economic, social and cultural structures of contemporary society. Drawing on methodologically innovative techniques, these perspectives can offer conceptually significant and policy relevant insights into the changing nature and meanings of migration across the lifecourse
WikiLinkGraphs: A Complete, Longitudinal and Multi-Language Dataset of the Wikipedia Link Networks
Wikipedia articles contain multiple links connecting a subject to other pages
of the encyclopedia. In Wikipedia parlance, these links are called internal
links or wikilinks. We present a complete dataset of the network of internal
Wikipedia links for the largest language editions. The dataset contains
yearly snapshots of the network and spans years, from the creation of
Wikipedia in 2001 to March 1st, 2018. While previous work has mostly focused on
the complete hyperlink graph which includes also links automatically generated
by templates, we parsed each revision of each article to track links appearing
in the main text. In this way we obtained a cleaner network, discarding more
than half of the links and representing all and only the links intentionally
added by editors. We describe in detail how the Wikipedia dumps have been
processed and the challenges we have encountered, including the need to handle
special pages such as redirects, i.e., alternative article titles. We present
descriptive statistics of several snapshots of this network. Finally, we
propose several research opportunities that can be explored using this new
dataset.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 7 tables, LaTeX. Final camera-ready version
accepted at the 13TH International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media
(ICWSM 2019) - Munich (Germany), 11-14 June 201
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