How to make a semantic web browser
Proceedings of the 13th international conference on World Wide Web
The evolving mSpace platform: leveraging the semantic web on the trail of the memex
Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Hide the stack: toward usable linked data
ESWC'11 Proceedings of the 8th extended semantic web conference on The semantic web: research and applications - Volume Part I
Fresnel: a browser-independent presentation vocabulary for RDF
ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
Approaches to visualising linked data: a survey
Semantic Web
Towards RVL: a declarative language for visualizing RDFS/OWL data
Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Web Intelligence, Mining and Semantics
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Visual paradigms such as node-link diagrams are well suited to the representation of Semantic Web data encoded with the Resource Description Framework (RDF), whose data model can be seen as a directed labeled graph. However, these representations are not fully satisfying: diagrams can quickly become big and over-cluttered, making them hard to understand. This problem can be partly addressed by visually transforming the graphs: filtering information, providing alternative layouts for specific elements, and using all available visual variables to encode information, so as to better take advantage of human perceptual abilities. Graph Style Sheets have been designed for that purpose, allowing the filtering, grouping and styling of information elements through the specification of declarative transformation rules.