975 resultados para Web Semantico semantic open data geoSPARQL
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Nel Capitolo 1, vedremo un introduzione di che cos’è l’open data, cos’è l’open government. Che vantaggi ci sono con l’open data e come ogni cosa positi- va sappiamo che c’è l’aspetto negativo, pertanto vedremo anche gli svantaggi; ca- pire il motivo per cui è stato scelto. Vedremo quali sono i primi passi per aprire i dati e un piccolo accenno sulle li- cenze. Per poi terminare con i 5 livelli che ci prepareranno al secondo capitolo. Il Capitolo 2, è quello che definirei nozioni specifiche sul argomento, quelle che portano a comprendere bene le nuove tecnologie che stanno dietro, i formati dei file che vengono resi pubblici e una piccola anteprima su come usare questi formati. Per quanto riguarda il Capitolo 3, visiteremo il portale dell’Emilia Romagna e dove vedremo l’iniziativa regionale e l’aspetto riguardante al obbiettivo che si sta cercando di perseguire. Il sito oggetto della nostra documentazione è: dati.emilia- romagna.it il portale ufficiale dove è possibile consultare vari progetti. Nel Capitolo 4, prenderemo Bologna come caso di studio, dove rivedremo alcune cose già fatte nei capitoli precedenti e come elemento in più vedremo al- cuni progetti. Come per la regione anche per Bologna prendiamo il portale uffi- ciale dati.comune.bologna.it come oggetto di lavoro.
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Open web steel joists are designed in the United States following the governing specification published by the Steel Joist Institute. For compression members in joists, this specification employs an effective length factor, or K-factor, in confirming their adequacy. In most cases, these K-factors have been conservatively assumed equal to 1.0 for compression web members, regardless of the fact that intuition and limited experimental work indicate that smaller values could be justified. Given that smaller K-factors could result in more economical designs without a loss in safety, the research presented in this thesis aims to suggest procedures for obtaining more rational values. Three different methods for computing in-plane and out-of-plane K-factors are investigated, including (1) a hand calculation method based on the use of alignment charts, (2) computational critical load (eigenvalue) analyses using uniformly distributed loads, and (3) computational analyses using a compressive strain approach. The latter method is novel and allows for computing the individual buckling load of a specific member within a system, such as a joist. Four different joist configurations are investigated, including an 18K3, 28K10, and two variations of a 32LH06. Based on these methods and the very limited number of joists studied, it appears promising that in-plane and out-of-plane K-factors of 0.75 and 0.85, respectively, could be used in computing the flexural buckling strength of web members in routine steel joist design. Recommendations for future work, which include systematically investigating a wider range of joist configurations and connection restraint, are provided.
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Earth observations (EO) represent a growing and valuable resource for many scientific, research and practical applications carried out by users around the world. Access to EO data for some applications or activities, like climate change research or emergency response activities, becomes indispensable for their success. However, often EO data or products made of them are (or are claimed to be) subject to intellectual property law protection and are licensed under specific conditions regarding access and use. Restrictive conditions on data use can be prohibitive for further work with the data. Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) is an initiative led by the Group on Earth Observations (GEO) with the aim to provide coordinated, comprehensive, and sustained EO and information for making informed decisions in various areas beneficial to societies, their functioning and development. It seeks to share data with users world-wide with the fewest possible restrictions on their use by implementing GEOSS Data Sharing Principles adopted by GEO. The Principles proclaim full and open exchange of data shared within GEOSS, while recognising relevant international instruments and national policies and legislation through which restrictions on the use of data may be imposed.The paper focuses on the issue of the legal interoperability of data that are shared with varying restrictions on use with the aim to explore the options of making data interoperable. The main question it addresses is whether the public domain or its equivalents represent the best mechanism to ensure legal interoperability of data. To this end, the paper analyses legal protection regimes and their norms applicable to EO data. Based on the findings, it highlights the existing public law statutory, regulatory, and policy approaches, as well as private law instruments, such as waivers, licenses and contracts, that may be used to place the datasets in the public domain, or otherwise make them publicly available for use and re-use without restrictions. It uses GEOSS and the particular characteristics of it as a system to identify the ways to reconcile the vast possibilities it provides through sharing of data from various sources and jurisdictions on the one hand, and the restrictions on the use of the shared resources on the other. On a more general level the paper seeks to draw attention to the obstacles and potential regulatory solutions for sharing factual or research data for the purposes that go beyond research and education.
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It is a challenge to measure the impact of releasing data to the public since the effects may not be directly linked to particular open data activities or substantial impact may only occur several years after publishing the data. This paper proposes a framework to assess the impact of releasing open data by applying the Social Return on Investment (SROI) approach. SROI was developed for organizations intended to generate social and environmental benefits thus fitting the purpose of most open data initiatives. We link the four steps of SROI (input, output, outcome, impact) with the 14 high-value data categories of the G8 Open Data Charter to create a matrix of open data examples, activities, and impacts in each of the data categories. This Impact Monitoring Framework helps data providers to navigate the impact space of open data laying out the conceptual basis for further research.
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In this introductory chapter we put in context and give a brief outline of the work that we thoroughly present in the rest of the dissertation. We consider this work divided in two main parts. The first part is the Firenze Framework, a knowledge level description framework rich enough to express the semantics required for describing both semantic Web services and semantic Grid services. We start by defining what the Semantic Grid is and its relation with the Semantic Web; and the possibility of their convergence since both initiatives have become mainly service-oriented. We also introduce the main motivators of the creation of this framework, one is to provide a valid description framework that works at knowledge level; the other to provide a description framework that takes into account the characteristics of Grid services in order to be able to describe them properly. The other part of the dissertation is devoted to Vega, an event-driven architecture that, by means of proposed knowledge level description framework, is able to achieve high scale provisioning of knowledge-intensive services. In this introductory chapter we portrait the anatomy of a generic event-driven architecture, and we briefly enumerate their main characteristics, which are the reason that make them our choice.
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Este trabajo, «Una aproximación a Ia integración en Open Data de los recursos Inspire de Ia IDEE », tiene por objetivo el construir un puente entre las Infraestructuras de Datos Espaciales (IDE) y el mundo de los «datos abiertos » aprovechando el marco legal de la Reutilización de la Información del Sector Público (RISP). Tras analizar qué es RISP y en particular los datos abiertos, y cómo se implementa en distintas Administraciones, se estudian los requisitos técnicos y legales necesarios para construir el «traductor» que permita canalizar la información IDE en el portal central de reutilización de información español datos.gob.es, dando una mayor visibilidad a los recursos INSPIRE. El trabajo se centra específicamente en dos puntos: en primer lugar en proporcionar y documentar la solución técnica que sirva en primera instancia para que el Instituto Geográfico Nacional aporte con más eficiencia sus recursos a datos.gob.es. En segundo lugar, a estudiar la aplicabilidad de esta misma solución al ámbito de la IDE de España (IDEE), señalando problemas detectados en el análisis de su contenido y sugiriendo recomendaciones para minimizar los problemas de su potencial reutilización. ABSTRACT: This work titled «Analysis of the integration of INSPIRE resources coming from Spanish Spatial Data Infrastructure within the National Public Sector Information portal», aims to build a bridge between the Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDI ) and the world of "Open Data" taking advantage of the legal framework on the Re-use of Public Sector Information (PSI) . After analyzing what PSI reuse and Open Data is and how it is implemented by different administrations, a study to extract the technical and legal requirements is done to build the "translator" that will allow adding SDI resources within the Spanish portal for the PSI reuse data .gob.es while giving greater visibility to INSPIRE. This document specifically focuses on two aspects: first to provide and document the technical solution that serves primarily for the National Geographic Institute to supply more efficiently its resources to datos.gob.es. Secondly, to study the applicability of the proposed solution to the whole Spanish SDI (IDEE), noting identified problems and suggesting recommendations to minimize problems of its potential reuse.
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Within the European Union, member states are setting up official data catalogues as entry points to access PSI (Public Sector Information). In this context, it is important to describe the metadata of these data portals, i.e., of data catalogs, and allow for interoperability among them. To tackle these issues, the Government Linked Data Working Group developed DCAT (Data Catalog Vocabulary), an RDF vocabulary for describing the metadata of data catalogs. This topic report analyzes the current use of the DCAT vocabulary in several European data catalogs and proposes some recommendations to deal with an inconsistent use of the metadata across countries. The enrichment of such metadata vocabularies with multilingual descriptions, as well as an account for cultural divergences, is seen as a necessary step to guarantee interoperability and ensure wider adoption.
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Overview of the key aspects and approaches to open access, open data and open science, emphasizing on sharing scientific knowledge for sustainable progress and development.
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Questo lavoro di tesi si concentra sulle estensioni apportate a BEX (Bibliographic Explorer), una web app finalizzata alla navigazione di pubblicazioni scientifiche attraverso le loro citazioni. Il settore in cui si colloca è il Semantic Publishing, un nuovo ambito di ricerca derivato dall'applicazione delle tecnologie del Semantic Web allo Scholarly Publishing, che ha come scopo la pubblicazione di articoli accademici a cui vengono associati metadati semantici. BEX nasce all'interno del Semantic Lancet Project del Dipartimento di Informatica dell'Università di Bologna, il cui obiettivo è costruire un Linked Open Dataset di pubblicazioni accademiche, il Semantic Lancet Triplestore (SLT), e fornire strumenti per la navigazione ad alto livello e l'uso approfondito dei dati in esso contenuti. Gli scholarly Linked Open Data elaborati da BEX sono insiemi di triple RDF conformi alle ontologie SPAR. Originariamente BEX ha come backend il dataset SLT che contiene metadati relativi alle pubblicazioni del Journal Of Web Semantics di Elsevier. BEX offre viste avanzate tramite un'interfaccia interattiva e una buona user-experience. L'utente di BEX è principalmente il ricercatore universitario, che per compiere le sue attività quotidiane fa largo uso delle Digital Library (DL) e dei servizi che esse offrono. Dato il fermento dei ricercatori nel campo del Semantic Publishing e la veloce diffusione della pubblicazione di scholarly Linked Open Data è ragionevole pensare di ampliare e mantenere un progetto che possa provvedere al sense making di dati altrimenti interrogabili solo in modo diretto con queries SPARQL. Le principali integrazioni a BEX sono state fatte in termini di scalabilità e flessibilità: si è implementata la paginazione dei risultati di ricerca, l'indipendenza da SLT per poter gestire datasets diversi per struttura e volume, e la creazione di viste author centric tramite aggregazione di dati e comparazione tra autori.
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La tesi ha lo scopo di introdurre Investiga, un'applicazione per l'estrazione automatica di informazioni da articoli scientifici in formato PDF e pubblicazione di queste informazioni secondo i principi e i formati Linked Open Data, creata per la tesi. Questa applicazione è basata sul Task 2 della SemPub 2016, una challenge che ha come scopo principale quello di migliorare l'estrazione di informazioni da articoli scientifici in formato PDF. Investiga estrae i capitoli di primo livello, le didascalie delle figure e delle tabelle da un dato articolo e crea un grafo delle informazioni così estratte collegate adeguatamente tra loro. La tesi inoltre analizza gli strumenti esistenti per l'estrazione automatica di informazioni da documenti PDF e dei loro limiti.
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La tesi descrive PARLEN, uno strumento che permette l'analisi di articoli, l'estrazione e il riconoscimento delle entità - ad esempio persone, istituzioni, città - e il collegamento delle stesse a risorse online. PARLEN è inoltre in grado di pubblicare i dati estratti in un dataset basato su principi e tecnologie del Semantic Web.
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Smart cities, cities that are supported by an extensive digital infrastructure of sensors, databases and intelligent applications, have become a major area of academic, governmental and public interest. Simultaneously, there has been a growing interest in open data, the unrestricted use of organizational data for public viewing and use. Drawing on Science and Technology Studies (STS), Urban Studies and Political Economy, this thesis examines how digital processes, open data and the physical world can be combined in smart city development, through the qualitative interview-based case study of a Southern Ontario Municipality, Anytown. The thesis asks what are the challenges associated with smart city development and open data proliferation, is open data complimentary to smart urban development; and how is expertise constructed in these fields? The thesis concludes that smart city development in Anytown is a complex process, involving a variety of visions, programs and components. Although smart city and open data initiatives exist in Anytown, and some are even overlapping and complementary, smart city development is in its infancy. However, expert informants remained optimistic, faithful to a technologically sublime vision of what a smart city would bring. The thesis also questions the notion of expertise within the context of smart city and open data projects, concluding that assertions of expertise need to be treated with caution and scepticism when considering how knowledge is received, generated, interpreted and circulates, within organizations.
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El movimiento de datos abiertos es relativamente nuevo, ofrece beneficios significativos a la sociedad y a la economía, promueve la democracia y la responsabilidad de los gobiernos públicos fomentando la transparencia, participación y colaboración de los ciudadanos. Por ser un movimiento relativamente nuevo, son los países que lideran el desarrollo quienes ya han implementado políticas de datos abiertos y ya disfrutan de sus beneficios; sin embargo, hay países en los que aún ni siquiera hay iniciativas de datos abiertos o aún están comenzando. En este trabajo se estudia el uso adecuado de buenas prácticas, normas, métricas y estándares para la implantación de datos abiertos de manera sostenible, automatizable y en formatos accesibles que garanticen la reutilización de los datos con el fin de generar valor a través de ellos, al crear nuevos productos y servicios que contribuyan a mejorar la calidad de vida de los ciudadanos. En ese sentido, se realiza un análisis exploratorio de los principios de datos abiertos, se realiza un análisis sobre la situación actual de iniciativas de datos abiertos, y con el fin de que el proyecto sea de máxima aplicabilidad, se realizan pruebas de la métrica Meloda 4.0 sobre conjuntos de datos del Ayuntamiento de Madrid. Se realiza un análisis y evaluación de los portales de datos abiertos de los Ayuntamientos de Madrid, Zaragoza y Barcelona basándose en la Norma UNE 178301:2015. En concordancia con la filosofía de datos abiertos, se estudia y sugiere el uso de tecnologías de código abierto para la publicación de datos abiertos. Finalmente, como resultado y aplicabilidad de todo lo aprendido, se propone el diseño de una metodología para publicación de datos abiertos orientada a entidades públicas que aún no tienen iniciativas o están comenzando a implementar políticas de datos abiertos.