12,528 research outputs found
Introducing fuzzy trust for managing belief conflict over semantic web data
Interpreting Semantic Web Data by different human experts can end up in scenarios, where each expert comes up with different and conflicting ideas what a concept can mean and how they relate to other concepts. Software agents that operate on the Semantic Web have to deal with similar scenarios where the interpretation of Semantic Web data that describes the heterogeneous sources becomes contradicting. One such application area of the Semantic Web is ontology mapping where different similarities have to be combined into a more reliable and coherent view, which might easily become unreliable if the conflicting
beliefs in similarities are not managed effectively between the different agents. In this paper we propose a solution for managing this conflict by introducing trust between the mapping agents based on the fuzzy voting model
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AQUA: an ontology driven question answering system
This paper describes AQUA our question answering over the Web. AQUA was designed to work over heterogeneous sources. This means that AQUA is equipped to work as closed domain and in addition to open-domain question answering. As a first instance, AQUA tries to answer a question using a Knowledge base. If a query cannot be satisfied over a knowledge base/database. Then, AQUA tries to find an answer on web pages (i.e. it uses as corpus the internet as resource). Our system uses NLP (Natural Language Processing), First order logic and Information Extraction technologies. AQUA has been tested using an ontology which describes academic life. Keywords Ontologies, Information Extraction, Machine Learnin
Transcriptomic effects of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug Ibuprofen in the marine bivalve Mytilus galloprovincialis Lam
The transcriptomic effects of Ibuprofen (IBU) in the digestive gland tissue of Mytilus galloprovincialis Lam. specimens exposed at low environmental concentrations (250 ng L-1) are presented. Using a 1.7 K feature cDNA microarray along with linear models and empirical Bayes statistical methods 225 differentially expressed genes were identified in mussels treated with IBU across a 15-day period. Transcriptional dynamics were typical of an adaptive response with a peak of gene expression change at day 7 (177 features, representing about 11% of sequences available for analysis) and an almost full recovery at the end of the exposure period. Functional genomics by means of Gene Ontology term analysis unraveled typical mussel stress responses i.e. aminoglycan (chitin) metabolic processes but also more specific effects such as the regulation of NF-kappa B transcription factor activity. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Extracting quasi-steady Lagrangian transport patterns from the ocean circulation: An application to the Gulf of Mexico
We construct a climatology of Lagrangian coherent structures (LCSs), the
concealed skeleton that shapes transport, with a twelve-year-long
data-assimilative simulation of the sea-surface circulation in the Gulf of
Mexico (GoM). Computed as time-mean Cauchy-Green strain tensorlines of the
climatological velocity, the climatological LCSs (cLCSs) unveil recurrent
Lagrangian circulation patterns. cLCSs strongly constrain the ensemble-mean
Lagrangian circulation of the instantaneous model velocity, thus we show that a
climatological velocity may preserve meaningful transport information. Also,
the climatological transport patterns we report agree well with GoM kinematics
and dynamics, as described in several previous observational and numerical
studies. For example, cLCSs identify regions of persistent isolation, and
suggest that coastal regions previously identified as high-risk for pollution
impact, are regions of maximal attraction. Also, we show examples where cLCSs
are remarkably similar to transport patterns observed during the Deepwater
Horizon and Ixtoc oil spills, and during the Grand LAgrangian Deployment (GLAD)
experiment. Thus, it is shown that cLCSs are an efficient way of synthesizing
vast amounts of Lagrangian information. The cLCS method confirms previous GoM
studies, and contributes to our understanding by revealing the persistent
nature of the dynamics and kinematics treated therein.Comment: To be submitte
Inertia-induced accumulation of flotsam in the subtropical gyres
Recent surveys of marine plastic debris density have revealed high levels in
the center of the subtropical gyres. Earlier studies have argued that the
formation of great garbage patches is due to Ekman convergence in such regions.
In this work we report a tendency so far overlooked of drogued and undrogued
drifters to accumulate distinctly over the subtropical gyres, with undrogued
drifters accumulating in the same areas where plastic debris accumulate. We
show that the observed accumulation is too fast for Ekman convergence to
explain it. We demonstrate that the accumulation is controlled by finite-size
and buoyancy (i.e., inertial) effects on undrogued drifter motion subjected to
ocean current and wind drags. We infer that the motion of flotsam in general is
constrained by similar effects. This is done by using a newly proposed
Maxey--Riley equation which models the submerged (surfaced) drifter portion as
a sphere of the fractional volume that is submerged (surfaced).Comment: Submitted to Geophys. Res. Letter
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