131 research outputs found
Help me describe my data: A demonstration of the Open PHACTS VoID Editor
Abstract. The Open PHACTS VoID Editor helps non-Semantic Web experts to create machine interpretable descriptions for their datasets. The web app guides the user, an expert in the domain of the data, through a series of questions to capture details of their dataset and then generates a VoID dataset description. The generated dataset description conforms to the Open PHACTS dataset description guidelines that en-sure suitable provenance information is available about the dataset to enable its discovery and reuse
SeaNet -- Towards A Knowledge Graph Based Autonomic Management of Software Defined Networks
Automatic network management driven by Artificial Intelligent technologies
has been heatedly discussed over decades. However, current reports mainly focus
on theoretic proposals and architecture designs, works on practical
implementations on real-life networks are yet to appear. This paper proposes
our effort toward the implementation of knowledge graph driven approach for
autonomic network management in software defined networks (SDNs), termed as
SeaNet. Driven by the ToCo ontology, SeaNet is reprogrammed based on Mininet (a
SDN emulator). It consists three core components, a knowledge graph generator,
a SPARQL engine, and a network management API. The knowledge graph generator
represents the knowledge in the telecommunication network management tasks into
formally represented ontology driven model. Expert experience and network
management rules can be formalized into knowledge graph and by automatically
inferenced by SPARQL engine, Network management API is able to packet
technology-specific details and expose technology-independent interfaces to
users. The Experiments are carried out to evaluate proposed work by comparing
with a commercial SDN controller Ryu implemented by the same language Python.
The evaluation results show that SeaNet is considerably faster in most
circumstances than Ryu and the SeaNet code is significantly more compact.
Benefit from RDF reasoning, SeaNet is able to achieve O(1) time complexity on
different scales of the knowledge graph while the traditional database can
achieve O(nlogn) at its best. With the developed network management API, SeaNet
enables researchers to develop semantic-intelligent applications on their own
SDNs
PAV ontology: provenance, authoring and versioning
Provenance is a critical ingredient for establishing trust of published
scientific content. This is true whether we are considering a data set, a
computational workflow, a peer-reviewed publication or a simple scientific
claim with supportive evidence. Existing vocabularies such as DC Terms and the
W3C PROV-O are domain-independent and general-purpose and they allow and
encourage for extensions to cover more specific needs. We identify the specific
need for identifying or distinguishing between the various roles assumed by
agents manipulating digital artifacts, such as author, contributor and curator.
We present the Provenance, Authoring and Versioning ontology (PAV): a
lightweight ontology for capturing just enough descriptions essential for
tracking the provenance, authoring and versioning of web resources. We argue
that such descriptions are essential for digital scientific content. PAV
distinguishes between contributors, authors and curators of content and
creators of representations in addition to the provenance of originating
resources that have been accessed, transformed and consumed. We explore five
projects (and communities) that have adopted PAV illustrating their usage
through concrete examples. Moreover, we present mappings that show how PAV
extends the PROV-O ontology to support broader interoperability.
The authors strived to keep PAV lightweight and compact by including only
those terms that have demonstrated to be pragmatically useful in existing
applications, and by recommending terms from existing ontologies when
plausible.
We analyze and compare PAV with related approaches, namely Provenance
Vocabulary, DC Terms and BIBFRAME. We identify similarities and analyze their
differences with PAV, outlining strengths and weaknesses of our proposed model.
We specify SKOS mappings that align PAV with DC Terms.Comment: 22 pages (incl 5 tables and 19 figures). Submitted to Journal of
Biomedical Semantics 2013-04-26 (#1858276535979415). Revised article
submitted 2013-08-30. Second revised article submitted 2013-10-06. Accepted
2013-10-07. Author proofs sent 2013-10-09 and 2013-10-16. Published
2013-11-22. Final version 2013-12-06.
http://www.jbiomedsem.com/content/4/1/3
IVOA Recommendation: Vocabularies in the Virtual Observatory Version 1.19
This document specifies a standard format for vocabularies based on the W3C's
Resource Description Framework (RDF) and Simple Knowledge Organization System
(SKOS). By adopting a standard and simple format, the IVOA will permit
different groups to create and maintain their own specialised vocabularies
while letting the rest of the astronomical community access, use, and combine
them. The use of current, open standards ensures that VO applications will be
able to tap into resources of the growing semantic web. The document provides
several examples of useful astronomical vocabularies
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