scholarly journals Database to Semantic Web Mapping Using RDF Query Languages

Author(s):  
Cristian Pérez de Laborda ◽  
Stefan Conrad
Author(s):  
Artem Chebotko ◽  
Shiyong Lu

Relational technology has shown to be very useful for scalable Semantic Web data management. Numerous researchers have proposed to use RDBMSs to store and query voluminous RDF data using SQL and RDF query languages. This chapter studies how RDF queries with the so called well-designed graph patterns and nested optional patterns can be efficiently evaluated in an RDBMS. The authors propose to extend relational algebra with a novel relational operator, nested optional join (NOJ), that is more efficient than left outer join in processing nested optional patterns of well-designed graph patterns. They design three efficient algorithms to implement the new operator in relational databases: (1) nested-loops NOJ algorithm, NL-NOJ, (2) sort-merge NOJ algorithm, SM-NOJ, and (3) simple hash NOJ algorithm, SH-NOJ. Using a real life RDF dataset, the authors demonstrate the efficiency of their algorithms by comparing them with the corresponding left outer join implementations and explore the effect of join selectivity on the performance of these algorithms.


2018 ◽  
pp. 3429-3433
Author(s):  
James Bailey ◽  
François Bry ◽  
Tim Furche ◽  
Sebastian Schaffert
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Stéphane Jean ◽  
Yamine Aït Ameur ◽  
Guy Pierra

Current databases and their associated languages allow a user to exploit data according to their logical model. Usually, there is a gap between this logical model and the actual concepts represented. As a consequence, exploiting, exchanging and integrating data stored in databases are difficult. To overcome these problems, several approaches have proposed to extend current databases with ontologies. We called Ontology-Based Databases (OBDB) such databases. However, current database languages such as SQL have not been designed to exploit ontologies. Thus, a new generation of languages we called ontology query languages has emerged. The goal of this chapter is to provide an up to date survey on ontology query languages. We survey languages coming from the Semantic Web community as well as those coming from the database community.


2011 ◽  
pp. 503-521
Author(s):  
Flavius Frasincar ◽  
Jethro Borsje ◽  
Leonard Levering

This article proposes Hermes, a Semantic Webbased framework for building personalized news services. It makes use of ontologies for knowledge representation, natural language processing techniques for semantic text analysis, and semantic query languages for specifying wanted information. Hermes is supported by an implementation of the framework, the Hermes News Portal, a tool which allows users to have a personalized online access to news items. The Hermes framework and its associated implementation aim at advancing the state-of-the-art of semantic approaches for personalized news services by employing Semantic Web standards, exploiting domain information, using a word sense disambiguation procedure, and being able to express temporal constraints for the desired news items.


2009 ◽  
pp. 2583-2586 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Bailey ◽  
François Bry ◽  
Tim Furche ◽  
Sebastian Schaffert
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
James Bailey ◽  
François Bry ◽  
Tim Furche ◽  
Sebastian Schaffert
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
François Bry ◽  
Christoph Koch ◽  
Tim Furche ◽  
Sebastian Schaffert ◽  
Liviu Badea

A decade of experience with research proposals as well as standardized query languages for the conventional Web and the recent emergence of query languages for the Semantic Web call for a reconsideration of design principles for Web and Semantic Web query languages. This chapter first argues that a new generation of versatile Web query languages is needed for solving the challenges posed by the changing Web: We call versatile those query languages able to cope with both Weband Semantic Web data expressed in any (Web or Semantic Web) markup language. This chapter further suggests that well-known referential transparency and novel answer-closedness are essential features of versatile query languages. Indeed, they allow queries to be considered like forms and answers like form-fillings in the spirit of the query-by-example paradigm. This chapter finally suggests that the decentralized and heterogeneous nature of the Web requires incomplete data specifications (or incomplete queries) and incomplete data selections (or incomplete answers); the form-like query can be specified without precise knowledge of the queried data, and answers can be restricted to contain only an excerpt of the queried data.


Author(s):  
Peter Haase ◽  
Jeen Broekstra ◽  
Andreas Eberhart ◽  
Raphael Volz

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