Going digital: a look at assumptions underlying digital libraries
Communications of the ACM
Knowledge representation: logical, philosophical and computational foundations
Knowledge representation: logical, philosophical and computational foundations
Comparative analysis of five XML query languages
ACM SIGMOD Record
WebDAV: IETF Standard for Collaborative Authoring on the Web
IEEE Internet Computing
Knowledge Retrieval and the World Wide Web
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Ontobroker: Ontology Based Access to Distributed and Semi-Structured Information
DS-8 Proceedings of the IFIP TC2/WG2.6 Eighth Working Conference on Database Semantics- Semantic Issues in Multimedia Systems
ECDL '97 Proceedings of the First European Conference on Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries
From manual to semi-automatic semantic annotation: about ontology-based text annotation tools
Proceedings of the COLING-2000 Workshop on Semantic Annotation and Intelligent Content
The use of the Dublin Core in web annotation programs
DCMI '02 Proceedings of the 2002 international conference on Dublin core and metadata applications: Metadata for e-communities: supporting diversity and convergence
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Abstract: Data annotations provide an effective means to link data from diverse data archives to a domain conceptualization, e.g., ontology, which then provides users with an integrated and uniform view for querying the data. Existing approaches typically use document annotation techniques that require authors to embed linkage information into their documents. This prevents true collaborative extensions of documents by annotations and conceptual views of multiple users on the same data. This paper presents the concepts and architecture underlying a data annotation framework that enables external annotations of remote data at different levels of granularity. Semantic-carrying annotations, base d on a domain conceptualization model, allow multiple users to enrich the same data under different perspectives. XML and related techniques are used for managing, exchanging, and querying annotations and domain conceptualizations.