45 research outputs found
Example of use of FaBiO #3
<p>Associating keywords, subject terms and disciplines to a paper.</p
UNDO: the United Nations System Document Ontology
Akoma Ntoso is an OASIS Committee Specification Draft standard for the electronic representations of parliamentary, normative and judicial documents in XML. Recently, it has been officially adopted by the United Nations (UN) as the main electronic format for making UN documents machine-processable. However, Akoma Ntoso does not force nor define any formal ontology for allowing the description of real-world objects, concepts and relations mentioned in documents. In order to address this gap, in this paper we introduce the United Nations System Document Ontology (UNDO), i.e. an OWL 2 DL ontology developed and adopted by the United Nations that aims at providing a framework for the formal description of all these entities
Example of use of CiTO #2
<p>Annotating a citation act with an additional text-defined citation function.</p
SAMOD: an agile methodology for the development of ontologies
<em>SAMOD</em>, a.k.a. <em>Simplified Agile Methodology for Ontology Development</em>,
is a novel agile methodology for the development of ontologies by means of
small steps of an iterative workflow that focuses on creating
well-developed and documented models starting from exemplar domain
descriptions
The open citations revolution
Citations are the primary tool to acknowledge others' prior work on a particular topic. They enable one to find key publications within a particular field, and are used also for research purposes β e.g. people working in Bibliometrics, Informetrics, and Scientometrics use them for analysing the complex relationships that exist within huge networks of citations of scholarly works. In addition, citation data are important for the assessment of the quality of research by means of metrics and indicators calculated from citation databases. However, the cruel reality is that citations have been locked up in close silos for years, and often they can only be accessed by paying significant subscription fees.<br><br>But the scenario is quickly changing. In the past years, several initiatives (I4OC, OpenCitations, WikiCite, LORC, etc.) have started to promote the availability of open citation data. In this talk I will introduce some of the main significative efforts in the area, focussing on the way Semantic Publishing technologies have been used and adopted for enabling a FAIR publication of open citation data
RASH Framework - ESWC 2015 MoM session
<p>This slide (presented during the Minute of Madness session at ESWC 2015) introduces the RASH Framework, a set of specifications and tools for writing academic articles in RASH, i.e., a markup language defined as a subset of HTML for writing scientific articles.</p