How to Reuse a Faceted Classification and Put It on the Semantic Web
Research paper by Bene Rodriguez-Castro, Hugh Glaser, and Leslie Carr
Links to papers, talks and other publications in the media, highlighting the academic research and thought leadership undertaken by Seme4 founders and staff
Research paper by Bene Rodriguez-Castro, Hugh Glaser, and Leslie Carr
Research paper on semantic networks by Paul R. Smart, Winston Siecky, Katia Sycaraz and Nigel R. Shadbolt
Research paper describing an architecture to support the discovery of useful links between items across data sets by Manuel Salvadores, Gianluca Correndo, Martin Szomszor, Yang Yang, Nick Gibbins, Ian Millard, Hugh Glaser and Nigel Shadbolt
Research paper on provenance by Tope Omitola, Nicholas Gibbins and Nigel Shadbolt
Research paper the representation of geographical information by Gianluca Correndo, Manuel Salvadores, Yang Yang, Nicholas Gibbins and Nigel Shadbolt
Research paper on using the Web for cultural modelling by Paul R. Smart, Winston R. Sieck, and Nigel R. Shadbolt
Research paper presenting an algorithm for RDF data mediation by Gianluca Correndo, Manuel Salvadores, Ian Millard, Hugh Glaser and Nigel Shadbolt
Research paper on the representation of geographical information by Gianluca Correndo, Alberto Granzotto, Manuel Salvadores, Wendy Hall, and Nigel Shadbolt
Wendy Hall and Nigel Shadbolt’s keynote presentation at the Online Information Conference 2009, 1-3 December, 2009, Olympia Conference Centre, London.
Keynote presentation at the Online Information Conference 2009, 1-3 December, 2009, Olympia Conference Centre, London.
Research paper by Kieron OHara, Tim Berners-Lee, Wendy Hall & Nigel Shadbolt
“A New Way of Finding Information: Basic Technologies of the Semantic Web. A vital factor in the way the World Wide Web has revolutionized research has been its radical decentralization: any page can link to any other. This decentralization is scalable and removes bottlenecks in supply. Navigation can be via associational links, maintaining relevance, or key-word search, which allows the user a measure of control that makes a suitably connected computer a virtual, near-universal library.” …