172 research outputs found

    Bringing the IPTC News Architecture into the Semantic Web

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    Knowledge Base Evolution Analysis: A Case Study in the Tourism Domain

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    Stakeholders -- curator, consumer, etc. -- in the tourism domain routinely need to combine and compare statistical indicators about tourism. In this context, various Knowledge Bases (KBs) have been designed and developed in the Linked Open Data (LOD) cloud in order to support decision-making process in Tourism domain. Such KBs evolve over time: their data (instances) and schemes can be updated, extended, revised and refactored. However, unlike in more controlled types of knowledge bases, the evolution of KBs exposed in the LOD cloud is usually unrestrained, what may cause data to suffer from a variety of issues. This paper attempts to address the impact of KB evolution in tourism domain by showing how entity evolves over time using the 3cixty KB. We show that using multiple versions of the KB through time can help to understand inconsistency in the data collection process

    Multimedia Annotation Interoperability Framework

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    Multimedia systems typically contain digital documents of mixed media types, which are indexed on the basis of strongly divergent metadata standards. This severely hamplers the inter-operation of such systems. Therefore, machine understanding of metadata comming from different applications is a basic requirement for the inter-operation of distributed Multimedia systems. In this document, we present how interoperability among metadata, vocabularies/ontologies and services is enhanced using Semantic Web technologies. In addition, it provides guidelines for semantic interoperability, illustrated by use cases. Finally, it presents an overview of the most commonly used metadata standards and tools, and provides the general research direction for semantic interoperability using Semantic Web technologies

    Vocabularies for description of accessibility issues in multimodal user interfaces

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    In previous work, we proposed a unified approach for describing multimodal human-computer interaction and interaction constraints in terms of sensual, motor, perceptual and cognitive functions of users. In this paper, we extend this work by providing formalised vocabularies that express human functionalities and anatomical structures required by specific modalities. The central theme of our approach is to connect these modality representations with descriptions of user, device and environmental constraints that influence the interaction. These descriptions can then be used in a reasoning framework that will exploit formal connections among interaction modalities and constraints. The focus of this paper is on specifying a comprehensive vocabulary of necessary concepts. Within the context of an interaction framework, we describe a number of examples that use this formalised knowledge

    Vocabularies for description of accessibility issues in multimodal user interfaces

    Get PDF
    In previous work, we proposed a unified approach for describing multimodal human-computer interaction and interaction constraints in terms of sensual, motor, perceptual and cognitive functions of users. In this paper, we extend this work by providing formalised vocabularies that express human functionalities and anatomical structures required by specific modalities. The central theme of our approach is to connect these modality representations with descriptions of user, device and environmental constraints that influence the interaction. These descriptions can then be used in a reasoning framework that will exploit formal connections among interaction modalities and constraints. The focus of this paper is on specifying a comprehensive vocabulary of necessary concepts. Within the context of an interaction framework, we describe a number of examples that use this formalised knowledge
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