Anno4j - Idiomatic Access to the W3C Web Annotation Data Model

Author(s):  
Emanuel Berndl ◽  
Kai Schlegel ◽  
Andreas Eisenkolb ◽  
Thomas Weißgerber ◽  
Harald Kosch
Author(s):  
Jacob Jett ◽  
Timothy W. Cole ◽  
David Dubin ◽  
Allen H. Renear

Much attention has been given to strategies for anchoring annotations in digital documents, but very little to identifying what the annotation is actually about. We may think of annotations as being about their anchors, but that is not typically the case. Two annotations may have the same anchor, such as a string of characters, but one annotation is about the sentence represented by that string and the other about the claim being made by that sentence. Identifying targets and making this information available for computational processing would provide improved support for a variety of information management tasks. We discuss this problem and explore a possible extension to the W3C Web Annotation Data Model that would help with annotation target identification.


Author(s):  
BAUKE DE VRIES ◽  
JORAN JESSURUN ◽  
NICOLE SEGERS ◽  
HENRI ACHTEN

In computer-aided architectural design, words are an underemployed source of information. Through a series of case studies, we deduced a design annotation data model. All entities in this model can be captured from the design draft, except one: the word relation. Therefore, a system was developed that generates word graphs using single words from the draft as input. The system searches for semantic relations between words and for new intermediate words that can connect two existing words. The system has filters that select only those graphs that are considered interesting by the designers. The envisioned applications of word graphs in the context of computer-aided architectural design are to contribute to the architect's design and to enhance the fluency of the design. These expectations are met, but must be considered in relation to the architect's drafting behavior.


Author(s):  
Robert Sanderson ◽  
Paolo Ciccarese ◽  
Herbert Van de Sompel
Keyword(s):  

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro J. M. Passos ◽  
Duarte Araujo ◽  
Keith Davids ◽  
Ana Diniz ◽  
Luis Gouveia ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 95-115
Author(s):  
Brandon Plewe

Historical place databases can be an invaluable tool for capturing the rich meaning of past places. However, this richness presents obstacles to success: the daunting need to simultaneously represent complex information such as temporal change, uncertainty, relationships, and thorough sourcing has been an obstacle to historical GIS in the past. The Qualified Assertion Model developed in this paper can represent a variety of historical complexities using a single, simple, flexible data model based on a) documenting assertions of the past world rather than claiming to know the exact truth, and b) qualifying the scope, provenance, quality, and syntactics of those assertions. This model was successfully implemented in a production-strength historical gazetteer of religious congregations, demonstrating its effectiveness and some challenges.


MIS Quarterly ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui Chen ◽  
◽  
Raj Sharman ◽  
H. Raghav Rao ◽  
Shambhu J. Upadhyaya ◽  
...  

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