3 resultados para RDF
Resumo:
La primera idea de la realización de este proyecto, fue concebida por la necesidad de tener un sistema por el cual se pudieran cambiar datos de una aplicación, en un sistema móvil, a través de una página web. Sin embargo al conocer la potencia que tiene RDF para ser muy escalable terminó siendo un sistema de gestión de contenido general en RDF. Este sistema de gestión se ha realizado para ser lo más simple posible para un usuario, de tal manera que con solo 2 click en la página web y rellenando un formulario simple, pudiera tener una base de datos sin muchos conocimientos sobre la gestión de las mismas. Aunque claramente no es un sistema potente como si fuera una base de datos en Oracle, por citar un ejemplo, sirve para poder agregar, modificar y eliminar datos con sencillez. Así este sistema de gestión da una posibilidad muy sencilla de realizar tus propias bases de datos. Además aunque tiene un motor SQL para la gestión interna de almacenamiento, la salida de los datos es en RDF/XML con lo que podría ser compatible con un sistema más amplio como Oracle Database Semantic Technologies. Este CMS también tendrá un sistema de seguridad basado en usuario y contraseña. Para que la edición del contenido sea accesible solo a usuarios con acceso, mientras que la exportación de los datos será pública, y podrá ser accesible por cualquier usuario mediante una URI.
Resumo:
More and more users aim at taking advantage of the existing Linked Open Data environment to formulate a query over a dataset and to then try to process the same query over different datasets, one after another, in order to obtain a broader set of answers. However, the heterogeneity of vocabularies used in the datasets on the one side, and the fact that the number of alignments among those datasets is scarce on the other, makes that querying task difficult for them. Considering this scenario we present in this paper a proposal that allows on demand translations of queries formulated over an original dataset, into queries expressed using the vocabulary of a targeted dataset. Our approach relieves users from knowing the vocabulary used in the targeted datasets and even more it considers situations where alignments do not exist or they are not suitable for the formulated query. Therefore, in order to favour the possibility of getting answers, sometimes there is no guarantee of obtaining a semantically equivalent translation. The core component of our proposal is a query rewriting model that considers a set of transformation rules devised from a pragmatic point of view. The feasibility of our scheme has been validated with queries defined in well known benchmarks and SPARQL endpoint logs, as the obtained results confirm.
Resumo:
Background: In recent years Galaxy has become a popular workflow management system in bioinformatics, due to its ease of installation, use and extension. The availability of Semantic Web-oriented tools in Galaxy, however, is limited. This is also the case for Semantic Web Services such as those provided by the SADI project, i.e. services that consume and produce RDF. Here we present SADI-Galaxy, a tool generator that deploys selected SADI Services as typical Galaxy tools. Results: SADI-Galaxy is a Galaxy tool generator: through SADI-Galaxy, any SADI-compliant service becomes a Galaxy tool that can participate in other out-standing features of Galaxy such as data storage, history, workflow creation, and publication. Galaxy can also be used to execute and combine SADI services as it does with other Galaxy tools. Finally, we have semi-automated the packing and unpacking of data into RDF such that other Galaxy tools can easily be combined with SADI services, plugging the rich SADI Semantic Web Service environment into the popular Galaxy ecosystem. Conclusions: SADI-Galaxy bridges the gap between Galaxy, an easy to use but "static" workflow system with a wide user-base, and SADI, a sophisticated, semantic, discovery-based framework for Web Services, thus benefiting both user communities.