Building a semantic web image repository for biological research images
ESWC'08 Proceedings of the 5th European semantic web conference on The semantic web: research and applications
A semantic approach to a framework for business domain software systems
Computers in Industry
Modeling a domain ontology for cultural heritage resources: A user-centered approach
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Digital libraries and Web 3.0. The CallimachusDL approach
Computers in Human Behavior
When You Doubt, Abstain: From Misclassification to Epoché in Automatic Text Categorisation
WI-IAT '11 Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conferences on Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology - Volume 03
User-Defined semantic enrichment of full-text documents: experiences and lessons learned
TPDL'12 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries
A distributed archival network for process-oriented autonomic long-term digital preservation
Proceedings of the 13th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
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Libraries have always been an inspiration for the standards and technologies developed by semantic web activities. However, except for the Dublin Core specification, semantic web and social networking technologies have not been widely adopted and further developed by major digital library initiatives and projects. Yet semantic technologies offer a new level of flexibility, interoperability, and relationships for digital repositories. Kruk and McDaniel present semantic web-related aspects of current digital library activities, and introduce their functionality; they show examples ranging from general architectural descriptions to detailed usages of specific ontologies, and thus stimulate the awareness of researchers, engineers, and potential users of those technologies. Their presentation is completed by chapters on existing prototype systems such as JeromeDL, BRICKS, and Greenstone, as well as a look into the possible future of semantic digital libraries. This book is aimed at researchers and graduate students in areas like digital libraries, the semantic web, social networks, and information retrieval. This audience will benefit from detailed descriptions of both todays possibilities and also the shortcomings of applying semantic web technologies to large digital repositories of often unstructured data.