Modeling Data Curation to Scientific Inquiry: A Case Study for Multimodal Data Integration

Author(s):  
Maria Esteva ◽  
Weijia Xu ◽  
Nevan Simone ◽  
Amit Gupta ◽  
Moriba Jah
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhinandan Kohli ◽  
◽  
Emile Fokkema ◽  
Oscar Kelder ◽  
Zulkifli Ahmad ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Kevin M. Boehm ◽  
Pegah Khosravi ◽  
Rami Vanguri ◽  
Jianjiong Gao ◽  
Sohrab P. Shah

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anchen Sun ◽  
Yudong Tao ◽  
Mei-Ling Shyu ◽  
Shu-Ching Chen ◽  
Angela Blizzard ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Piotr Habela ◽  
Krzysztof Kaczmarski ◽  
Hanna Kozankiewicz ◽  
Kazimierz Subieta

Author(s):  
Stefan Jablonski ◽  
Bernhard Volz ◽  
M. Abdul Rehman ◽  
Oliver Archner ◽  
Olivier Curé
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
César J. Acuña ◽  
Mariano Minoli ◽  
Esperanza Marcos

Several systems integration proposals have been suggested over the years. However these proposals have mainly focused on data integration, not allowing users to take advantage of services offered by Web portals. Most of the mentioned proposals only provide a set of design principles to build integrated systems and lack in suggesting a systematic way of how to develop systems based on the integration architecture they propose. In previous work we have developed PISA (Web Portal Integration Architecture)—a Web portal integration architecture for data and services—and MIDAS-S, a methodological approach for the development of integrated Web portals, built according to PISA. This work shows, by means of a case study, how both proposals fit together integrating Web portals.


Algorithms ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 59
Author(s):  
Georgios Alexandridis ◽  
Yorghos Voutos ◽  
Phivos Mylonas ◽  
George Caridakis

Short-term property rentals are perhaps one of the most common traits of present day shared economy. Moreover, they are acknowledged as a major driving force behind changes in urban landscapes, ranging from established metropolises to developing townships, as well as a facilitator of geographical mobility. A geolocation ontology is a high level inference tool, typically represented as a labeled graph, for discovering latent patterns from a plethora of unstructured and multimodal data. In this work, a two-step methodological framework is proposed, where the results of various geolocation analyses, important in their own respect, such as ghost hotel discovery, form intermediate building blocks towards an enriched knowledge graph. The outlined methodology is validated upon data crawled from the Airbnb website and more specifically, on keywords extracted from comments made by users of the said platform. A rather solid case-study, based on the aforementioned type of data regarding Athens, Greece, is addressed in detail, studying the different degrees of expansion & prevalence of the phenomenon among the city’s various neighborhoods.


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