Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Knowledge capture
The SWAN biomedical discourse ontology
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
An annotation scheme for citation function
SigDIAL '06 Proceedings of the 7th SIGdial Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue
From Proteins to Fairytales: Directions in Semantic Publishing
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Capturing rhetoric and argumentation aspects within scientific publications
Journal on data semantics XV
The SWRC ontology – semantic web for research communities
EPIA'05 Proceedings of the 12th Portuguese conference on Progress in Artificial Intelligence
Scholarly publishing and linked data: describing roles, statuses, temporal and contextual extents
Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Semantic Systems
EKAW'12 Proceedings of the 18th international conference on Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management
Faceted documents: describing document characteristics using semantic lenses
Proceedings of the 2012 ACM symposium on Document engineering
A preliminary study on the semantic representation of the notes to Dante Alighieri's Convivio
Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Collaborative Annotations in Shared Environment: metadata, vocabularies and techniques in the Digital Humanities
The aggregation of heterogeneous metadata in web-based cultural heritage collections: a case study
International Journal of Web Engineering and Technology
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Semantic publishing is the use of Web and Semantic Web technologies to enhance the meaning of a published journal article, to facilitate its automated discovery, to enable its linking to semantically related articles, to provide access to data within the article in actionable form, and to facilitate integration of data between articles. Recently, semantic publishing has opened the possibility of a major step forward in the digital publishing world. For this to succeed, new semantic models and visualization tools are required to fully meet the specific needs of authors and publishers. In this article, we introduce the principles and architectures of two new ontologies central to the task of semantic publishing: FaBiO, the FRBR-aligned Bibliographic Ontology, an ontology for recording and publishing bibliographic records of scholarly endeavours on the Semantic Web, and CiTO, the Citation Typing Ontology, an ontology for the characterization of bibliographic citations both factually and rhetorically. We present those two models step by step, in order to emphasise their features and to stress their advantages relative to other pre-existing information models. Finally, we review the uptake of FaBiO and CiTO within the academic and publishing communities.