scholarly journals An End-User Semantic Web Augmentation Tool

Author(s):  
Cristian Sottile ◽  
Sergio Firmenich ◽  
Diego Torres
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2.8) ◽  
pp. 436
Author(s):  
Prakhar Agarwal ◽  
Shivani Jain

Semantic Web is the extension of existing web that allows well defined expressions for the meaning of information which can be understood by computers and people both. In this paper we are doing study on semantic and is our review paper. Semantic web is a recommended development project by W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) which focuses on the enhancing of information search by keeping the facts in structured form using eXtensible Mark-up Language (XML) and marked in such a way that it can be understand by the system. To make the development of semantic web promising, new international standard is developed for exchanging of ontologies called OWL Web Ontology language. In XML we just provide tag of the model and store data in the hierarchy without its meaning, that’s why the computer cannot be able to process the data but in Semantic Web user can provide with a definition so that the computer can better recognize its meaning and provide with the better displaying of information. A crux of semantic web is that it works on the definition of the ontologies. Ontologies are responsible for re-usability and sharing of information. Semantic Web provides with a shared language which has stored data in the non-ending linking of distinct databases which provides data related to the real world objects. RDF is a common language for semantic web and is responsible for the collection of data on web and assembles different database from diverse sources and SPARQL is there for linking of databases for unifying documents. Thus, semantic web is the well-structured data web that relates all the data that present on the web and understands them to provide the exact display requested by the end user.


2013 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar Díaz ◽  
Cristóbal Arellano ◽  
Maider Azanza
Keyword(s):  
End User ◽  

Author(s):  
Iñigo Aldalur ◽  
Marco Winckler ◽  
Oscar Díaz ◽  
Philippe Palanque

Author(s):  
Diego Firmenich ◽  
Sergio Firmenich ◽  
Gustavo Rossi ◽  
Manuel Wimmer ◽  
Irene Garrigós ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Martin Wischenbart ◽  
Sergio Firmenich ◽  
Gustavo Rossi ◽  
Gabriela Bosetti ◽  
Elisabeth Kapsammer

Abstract In the past decades recommender systems have become a powerful tool to improve personalization on the Web. Yet, many popular websites lack such functionality, its implementation usually requires certain technical skills, and, above all, its introduction is beyond the scope and control of end-users. To alleviate these problems, this paper presents a novel tool to empower end-users without programming skills, without any involvement of website providers, to embed personalized recommendations of items into arbitrary websites on client-side. For this we have developed a generic meta-model to capture recommender system configuration parameters in general as well as in a web augmentation context. Thereupon, we have implemented a wizard in the form of an easy-to-use browser plug-in, allowing the generation of so-called user scripts, which are executed in the browser to engage collaborative filtering functionality from a provided external rest service. We discuss functionality and limitations of the approach, and in a study with end-users we assess the usability and show its suitability for combining recommender systems with web augmentation techniques, aiming to empower end-users to implement controllable recommender applications for a more personalized browsing experience.


Author(s):  
Efstratios Kontopoulos ◽  
Nick Bassiliades

This chapter is concerned with the visualization of defeasible logic rules in the Semantic Web domain. Logic plays an important role in the development of the Semantic Web and defeasible reasoning seems to be a very suitable tool. However, it is too complex for an end-user, who often needs graphical trace and explanation mechanisms for the derived conclusions. Directed graphs can assist in this affair, by offering the notion of direction that appears to be extremely applicable for the representation of rule attacks and superiorities in defeasible reasoning. Their applicability, however, is balanced by the fact that it is difficult to associate data of a variety of types with the nodes and the connections between the nodes in the graph. In this chapter we try to utilize digraphs in the graphical representation of defeasible rules, by exploiting the expressiveness and comprehensibility they offer, but also trying to leverage their major disadvantages. Finally, the chapter briefly presents a tool that implements this representation methodology.


Author(s):  
Bahaa Eldesouky ◽  
Menna Bakry ◽  
Heiko Maus ◽  
Andreas Dengel
Keyword(s):  

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