3 resultados para Metadata

em Lume - Repositório Digital da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul


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Nowadays, the popularity of the Web encourages the development of Hypermedia Systems dedicated to e-learning. Nevertheless, most of the available Web teaching systems apply the traditional paper-based learning resources presented as HTML pages making no use of the new capabilities provided by the Web. There is a challenge to develop educative systems that adapt the educative content to the style of learning, context and background of each student. Another research issue is the capacity to interoperate on the Web reusing learning objects. This work presents an approach to address these two issues by using the technologies of the Semantic Web. The approach presented here models the knowledge of the educative content and the learner’s profile with ontologies whose vocabularies are a refinement of those defined on standards situated on the Web as reference points to provide semantics. Ontologies enable the representation of metadata concerning simple learning objects and the rules that define the way that they can feasibly be assembled to configure more complex ones. These complex learning objects could be created dynamically according to the learners’ profile by intelligent agents that use the ontologies as the source of their beliefs. Interoperability issues were addressed by using an application profile of the IEEE LOM- Learning Object Metadata standard.

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O Resource Description Framework (RDF) é uma infra-estrutura, que possibilita a codificação, troca e reuso de metadata estruturado. Metadata é dados sobre dados. O termo refere a qualquer dado usado para ajudar a identificação, descrição e localização de recursos eletrônicos na rede. O RDF permite adicionar declarações, sinônimos e palavras que não estão presentes nos recursos, mas que são pertinentes a eles. Uma declaração RDF pode ser desenhada usando diagramas de arcos e nodos, onde os nodos representam os recursos e os arcos representam as propriedades nomeadas. O modelo básico consiste em recursos, propriedades e objetos. Todas as coisas sendo descritas pelas declarações RDF são chamadas de recursos. Um recurso pode ser uma página da Web inteira ou um elemento específico HTML ou XML dentro de um documento fonte. Uma propriedade é um aspecto específico, característica, atributo, ou relação usada para descrever um recurso. O objeto pode ser um outro recurso ou um literal. Estas três partes, juntas, formam uma declaração RDF. O resultado do parser para recursos com metadata RDF, é um conjunto de declarações referentes aquele recurso. A declaração destas propriedades e a semântica correspondente delas estão definidas no contexto do RDF como um RDF schema. Um esquema não só define as propriedades do recurso (por exemplo, título, autor, assunto, tamanho, cor, etc.), mas também pode definir os tipos de recursos sendo descritos (livros, páginas Web, pessoas, companhias, etc.). O RDF schema, provê um sistema básico de tipos necessários para descrever tais elementos e definir as classes de recursos. Assim, os recursos constituindo este sistema de tipos se tornam parte do modelo RDF de qualquer descrição que os usa. A geração de modelos RDF pode ser conseguida através de algoritmos implementados com linguagens de programação tradicionais e podem ser embutidos em páginas HTML, documentos XML e até mesmo em imagens. Com relação a modelos em imagens, servidores Web específicos são usados para simular dois recursos sobre o mesmo URI, servindo ora a imagem ora a descrição RDF. Uma alternativa para armazenar e manipular grande quantidade de declarações RDF é usar a tecnologia de banco de dados relacional. Abordagens para armazenar declarações RDF em banco de dados relacional foram propostas, mas todas elas mantêm modelos diversos de diferentes fontes. Critérios de avaliação como tempo de carga, proliferação de tabelas, espaço, dados mantidos e custo de instruções SQL foram definidos. Duas abordagens apresentaram resultados satisfatórios. Com uma nova abordagem proposta por este trabalho se obteve melhores resultados principalmente no aspecto de consultas. A nova proposta provê mecanismos para que o usuário faça seu próprio modelo relacional e crie suas consultas. O conhecimento necessário pelo usuário se limita em parte aos modelos mantidos e ao esquema RDF.

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The work described in this thesis aims to support the distributed design of integrated systems and considers specifically the need for collaborative interaction among designers. Particular emphasis was given to issues which were only marginally considered in previous approaches, such as the abstraction of the distribution of design automation resources over the network, the possibility of both synchronous and asynchronous interaction among designers and the support for extensible design data models. Such issues demand a rather complex software infrastructure, as possible solutions must encompass a wide range of software modules: from user interfaces to middleware to databases. To build such structure, several engineering techniques were employed and some original solutions were devised. The core of the proposed solution is based in the joint application of two homonymic technologies: CAD Frameworks and object-oriented frameworks. The former concept was coined in the late 80's within the electronic design automation community and comprehends a layered software environment which aims to support CAD tool developers, CAD administrators/integrators and designers. The latter, developed during the last decade by the software engineering community, is a software architecture model to build extensible and reusable object-oriented software subsystems. In this work, we proposed to create an object-oriented framework which includes extensible sets of design data primitives and design tool building blocks. Such object-oriented framework is included within a CAD Framework, where it plays important roles on typical CAD Framework services such as design data representation and management, versioning, user interfaces, design management and tool integration. The implemented CAD Framework - named Cave2 - followed the classical layered architecture presented by Barnes, Harrison, Newton and Spickelmier, but the possibilities granted by the use of the object-oriented framework foundations allowed a series of improvements which were not available in previous approaches: - object-oriented frameworks are extensible by design, thus this should be also true regarding the implemented sets of design data primitives and design tool building blocks. This means that both the design representation model and the software modules dealing with it can be upgraded or adapted to a particular design methodology, and that such extensions and adaptations will still inherit the architectural and functional aspects implemented in the object-oriented framework foundation; - the design semantics and the design visualization are both part of the object-oriented framework, but in clearly separated models. This allows for different visualization strategies for a given design data set, which gives collaborating parties the flexibility to choose individual visualization settings; - the control of the consistency between semantics and visualization - a particularly important issue in a design environment with multiple views of a single design - is also included in the foundations of the object-oriented framework. Such mechanism is generic enough to be also used by further extensions of the design data model, as it is based on the inversion of control between view and semantics. The view receives the user input and propagates such event to the semantic model, which evaluates if a state change is possible. If positive, it triggers the change of state of both semantics and view. Our approach took advantage of such inversion of control and included an layer between semantics and view to take into account the possibility of multi-view consistency; - to optimize the consistency control mechanism between views and semantics, we propose an event-based approach that captures each discrete interaction of a designer with his/her respective design views. The information about each interaction is encapsulated inside an event object, which may be propagated to the design semantics - and thus to other possible views - according to the consistency policy which is being used. Furthermore, the use of event pools allows for a late synchronization between view and semantics in case of unavailability of a network connection between them; - the use of proxy objects raised significantly the abstraction of the integration of design automation resources, as either remote or local tools and services are accessed through method calls in a local object. The connection to remote tools and services using a look-up protocol also abstracted completely the network location of such resources, allowing for resource addition and removal during runtime; - the implemented CAD Framework is completely based on Java technology, so it relies on the Java Virtual Machine as the layer which grants the independence between the CAD Framework and the operating system. All such improvements contributed to a higher abstraction on the distribution of design automation resources and also introduced a new paradigm for the remote interaction between designers. The resulting CAD Framework is able to support fine-grained collaboration based on events, so every single design update performed by a designer can be propagated to the rest of the design team regardless of their location in the distributed environment. This can increase the group awareness and allow a richer transfer of experiences among them, improving significantly the collaboration potential when compared to previously proposed file-based or record-based approaches. Three different case studies were conducted to validate the proposed approach, each one focusing one a subset of the contributions of this thesis. The first one uses the proxy-based resource distribution architecture to implement a prototyping platform using reconfigurable hardware modules. The second one extends the foundations of the implemented object-oriented framework to support interface-based design. Such extensions - design representation primitives and tool blocks - are used to implement a design entry tool named IBlaDe, which allows the collaborative creation of functional and structural models of integrated systems. The third case study regards the possibility of integration of multimedia metadata to the design data model. Such possibility is explored in the frame of an online educational and training platform.