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@article{unold_academic_2019,
title = {Academic {Meta} {Tool}. {Ein} {Web}-{Tool} zur {Modellierung} von {Vagheit}},
volume = {Mainz] Hg. von Andreas Kuczera / Thorsten Wübbena / Thomas Kollatz. Wolfenbüttel 2019. (= Zeitschrift für digitale Geisteswissenschaften / Sonderbände},
copyright = {CC BY-SA 4.0},
url = {http://www.zfdg.de/sb004_004},
doi = {10.17175/sb004_004},
abstract = {In diesem Artikel stellen wir eine Methodik zur Modellierung von Vagheit in Graphen vor. Neben der Modellierung behandeln wir auch die automatisierte Generierung von implizit gespeichertem Wissen unter Berücksichtigung von Vagheit. Diese wendet Verfahren aus dem Gebiet der Beschreibungslogik auf graphbasierte Daten an. Ebenfalls präsentieren wir in diesem Artikel unsere Softwareentwicklungen, welche die beschriebene Methodik umsetzen und zeigen deren Nutzen anhand von drei Fallbeispielen in den Geistes- und Kulturwissenschaften auf.},
urldate = {2019-04-10},
journal = {Die Modellierung des Zweifels – Schlüsselideen und -konzepte zur graphbasierten Modellierung von Unsicherheiten. [Ausgewählte Beiträge der Tagung 19.-20.01.2018 an der Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur},
author = {Unold, Martin and Thiery, Florian and Mees, Allard},
collaborator = {Kuczera, Andreas and Wübbena, Thorsten and Kollatz, Thomas},
year = {2019},
pages = {4)},
annote = {SeriesInformation
Die Modellierung des Zweifels – Schlüsselideen und -konzepte zur graphbasierten Modellierung von Unsicherheiten. [Ausgewählte Beiträge der Tagung 19.-20.01.2018 an der Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur, Mainz] Hg. von Andreas Kuczera / Thorsten Wübbena / Thomas Kollatz. Wolfenbüttel 2019. (= Zeitschrift für digitale Geisteswissenschaften / Sonderbände, 4)}
}
@misc{mccreary_computing,
title = {Knowledge {Graphs}: {The} {Third} {Era} of {Computing}},
shorttitle = {Knowledge {Graphs}},
url = {https://medium.com/@dmccreary/knowledge-graphs-the-third-era-of-computing-a8106f343450},
abstract = {My good friend Ed Sverdlin often begins our “Introduction to Graph Databases” presentations with the question “When did computing start?”…},
urldate = {2019-04-04},
journal = {Dan McCreary},
author = {McCreary, Dan},
month = mar,
year = {2019},
file = {Snapshot:C\:\\Users\\thiery.RGZM\\Zotero\\storage\\MMM8UUGC\\knowledge-graphs-the-third-era-of-computing-a8106f343450.html:text/html}
}
@misc{bernerslee_linkeddata,
title = {Linked {Data} - {Design} {Issues}},
shorttitle = {Linked {Data}},
url = {https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkedData.html},
urldate = {2019-04-04},
author = {Berners-Lee, Tim},
month = jul,
year = {2006},
file = {Linked Data - Design Issues:C\:\\Users\\thiery.RGZM\\Zotero\\storage\\LWL7BFV8\\LinkedData.html:text/html}
}
@misc{hausenblas_5star,
title = {5-star {Open} {Data}},
copyright = {CC0 Public Domain},
url = {http://5stardata.info/en/},
abstract = {Information around Tim Berners-Lee's 5-star Open Data Plan},
language = {en},
urldate = {2019-04-04},
journal = {5 ★ OPEN DATA},
author = {Hausenblas, Michael and Boram Kim, James G.},
month = aug,
year = {2015},
file = {Snapshot:C\:\\Users\\thiery.RGZM\\Zotero\\storage\\ILGBICF4\\en.html:text/html}
}
@book{hey_computing,
address = {New York, NY, USA},
title = {The computing universe: a journey through a revolution},
isbn = {978-0-521-76645-6 978-0-521-15018-7},
shorttitle = {The computing universe},
abstract = {"Computers now impact almost every aspect of our lives, from our social interactions to the safety and performance of our cars. How did this happen in such a short time? And this is just the beginning. In this book, Tony Hey and Gyuri Pápay lead us on a journey from the early days of computers in the 1930s to the cutting-edge research of the present day that will shape computing in the coming decades. Along the way, they explain the ideas behind hardware, software, algorithms, Moore's Law, the birth of the personal computer, the Internet and the Web, the Turing Test, Jeopardy's Watson, World of Warcraft, spyware, Google, Facebook, and quantum computing. This book also introduces the fascinating cast of dreamers and inventors who brought these great technological developments into every corner of the modern world. This exciting and accessible introduction will open up the universe of computing to anyone who has ever wondered where his or her smartphone came from"--},
publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
author = {Hey, Anthony J. G. and Pápay, Gyuri},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Computer science, COMPUTERS / Computer Science, History},
annote = {Machine generated contents note: 1. Beginnings of a revolution; 2. The hardware; 3. The software is in the holes; 4. Programming languages and software engineering; 5. Algorithmics; 6. Mr. Turing's amazing machines; 7. Moore's Law and the silicon revolution; 8. Computing gets personal; 9. Computer games; 10. Licklider's intergalactic computer network; 11. Weaving the World Wide Web; 12. The dark side of the Web; 13. Artificial intelligence and neural networks; 14. Machine learning and natural-language processing; 15. The end of Moore's Law; 16. The third age of computing; 17. Computers and science fiction - an essay}
}
@phdthesis{isaksen_archaeology,
type = {phd},
title = {Archaeology and the {Semantic} {Web}},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/206421/},
abstract = {This thesis explores the application of Semantic Web technologies to the discipline of Archaeology. Part One (Chapters 1-3) offers a discussion of historical developments in this field. It begins with a general comparison of the supposed benefits of semantic technologies and notes that they partially align with the needs of archaeologists. This is followed by a literature review which identifies two different perspectives on the Semantic Web: Mixed-Source Knowledge Representation (MSKR), which focuses on data interoperability between closed systems, and Linked Open Data (LOD), which connects decentralized, open resources. Part One concludes with a survey of 40 Cultural Heritage projects that have used semantic technologies and finds that they are indeed divided between these two visions.{\textless}br/{\textgreater}{\textless}br/{\textgreater}Part Two (Chapters 4-7) uses a case study, Roman Port Networks, to explore ways of facilitating MSKR. Chapter 4 describes a simple ontology and vocabulary framework, by means of which independently produced digital datasets pertaining to amphora finds at Roman harbour sites can be combined. The following chapters describe two entirely different approaches to converting legacy data to an ontology-compliant semantic format. The first, TRANSLATION, uses a 'Wizard'-style toolkit. The second, 'Introducing Semantics', is a wiki-based cookbook. Both methods are evaluated and found to be technically capable but socially impractical. {\textless}br/{\textgreater}{\textless}br/{\textgreater}The final chapter argues that the reason for this impracticality is the small-to-medium scale typical of MSKR projects. This does not allow for sufficient analytical return on the high level of investment required of project partners to convert and work with data in a new and unfamiliar format. It further argues that the scale at which such investment pays off is only likely to arise in an open and decentralized data landscape. Thus, for Archaeology to benefit from semantic technologies would require a severe sociological shift from current practice towards openness and decentralization. Whether such a shift is either desirable or feasible is raised as a topic for future work.},
language = {en},
urldate = {2019-04-04},
school = {University of Southampton},
author = {Isaksen, Leif},
collaborator = {Isaksen, Leif and Martinez, Kirk and Earl, Graeme and Gibbins, Nicholas and Keay, Simon and Weal, Mark},
month = dec,
year = {2011},
file = {Full Text PDF:C\:\\Users\\thiery.RGZM\\Zotero\\storage\\HKHVLQT2\\Isaksen - 2011 - Archaeology and the Semantic Web.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:C\:\\Users\\thiery.RGZM\\Zotero\\storage\\29744H8M\\206421.html:text/html}
}
@phdthesis{thiery_geinarfa,
type = {master thesis},
title = {Semantic {Web} und {Linked} {Data}: {Generierung} von {Interoperabilitaet} in archaeologischen {Fachdaten} am {Beispiel} roemischer {Toepferstempel}},
url = {https://zenodo.org/record/292979#.XKXq31UzZpg},
abstract = {Gegenstand der Masterarbeit ist die Verwendung aktueller Technologien interoperabler Datenhaltung, insbesondere das Konzept der Linked Open Data (LOD) und der semantischen Modellierung, zur Verdeutlichung ihres Potentials in archäologischen Informationen am Beispiel von Terra Sigillata-Fundorten, -Töpfern und -Keramikfragmenten. Die Arbeit zeigt eine Migration von Daten, sowie die Möglichkeiten und die Problematik der Modellierung der Attribute und Beziehungen mit Hilfe bestehender LOD-Konzepte und kontrollierter Vokabularien, sowie eigene Ansätze zur Lösung. Diese Daten werden mittels REST-Schnittstelle zur Verfügung gestellt. Ein Schwerpunkt wird auf die Verlinkung zu anderen bereits bestehenden Projekten gelegt, wodurch eine Vielzahl weiterer archäologischer und historischer Informationen z.B. über das Pelagios Projekt eingebunden werden. Zudem wird das Potential der Verlinkung und Abfrage von heterogenen Informationen zwischen Töpfern, Fragmenten und Orten deren relativ chronologische Beziehungen über LOD mit einer webbasierten Schnittstelle aufgezeigt.},
language = {de},
urldate = {2019-04-04},
school = {Fachhochschule Mainz},
author = {Florian Thiery},
month = dec,
year = {2013},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.292979},
keywords = {chronology, lined data, REST, samian ware, semantic web},
file = {Zenodo Full Text PDF:C\:\\Users\\thiery.RGZM\\Zotero\\storage\\2YIJ597L\\Florian Thiery - 2013 - Semantic Web und Linked Data Generierung von Inte.pdf:application/pdf}
}
@misc{sanderson_loud,
title = {{LOUD}: {Linked} {Open} {Usable} {Data}},
url = {https://linked.art/loud/},
urldate = {2019-04-05},
author = {Sanderson, Rob},
month = may,
year = {2019},
file = {LOUD\: Linked Open Usable Data:C\:\\Users\\thiery.RGZM\\Zotero\\storage\\S3RQT6J4\\loud.html:text/html}
}
@misc{thiery_zenodo_3,
title = {Academic {Meta} {Tool} - {Amt}.{Js}},
copyright = {Creative Commons Attribution 4.0, Open Access},
url = {https://zenodo.org/record/1342310},
abstract = {Academic Meta Tool - amt.js},
urldate = {2019-04-10},
publisher = {Zenodo},
author = {Unold, Martin and Thiery, Florian},
month = jan,
year = {2018},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1342310}
}
@misc{thiery_academic_2018,
title = {Academic {Meta} {Tool} - {Vocabulary}},
copyright = {Creative Commons Attribution 4.0, Open Access},
url = {https://zenodo.org/record/1342530},
abstract = {Academic Meta Tool - Vocabulary},
urldate = {2019-04-10},
publisher = {Zenodo},
author = {Thiery, Florian and Unold, Martin},
month = jan,
year = {2018},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1342530},
note = {type: dataset}
}
@misc{thiery_zenodo_1,
title = {Academic {Meta} {Tool} {Example} {Ontology} - {Northern} and {Southern} {Places}},
copyright = {Open Data Commons Attribution License v1.0, Open Access},
url = {https://zenodo.org/record/2633148},
abstract = {Academic Meta Tool Example Ontology - Northern and Southern Places},
urldate = {2019-04-10},
publisher = {Zenodo},
author = {Thiery, Florian},
month = jan,
year = {2018},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.2633148},
note = {type: dataset}
}