Intelligent Expert systems can provide decisions for users for estimate from user preferences to find better destination from user profits. this present provides description of above system and suggest new approach for next researches.
Semantic Query Optimisation with Ontology Simulationdannyijwest
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Semantic Web is, without a doubt, gaining momentum in both industry and academia. The word âSemanticâ refers to âmeaningâ â a semantic web is a web of meaning. In this fast changing and result oriented practical world, gone are the days where an individual had to struggle for finding information on the Internet where knowledge management was the major issue. The semantic web has a vision of linking, integrating and analysing data from various data sources and forming a new information stream, hence a web of databases connected with each other and machines interacting with other machines to yield results which are user oriented and accurate. With the emergence of Semantic Web framework the naĂŻve approach of searching information on the syntactic web is clichĂŠ. This paper proposes an optimised semantic searching of keywords exemplified by simulation an ontology of Indian universities with a proposed algorithm which ramifies the effective semantic retrieval of information which is easy to access and time saving.
Web of Data as a Solution for Interoperability. Case StudiesSabin Buraga
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The paper draws several considerations regarding the use of Web of Data (Semantic Web) technologies â such as metadata vocabularies and ontological constructs â to increase the degree of interoperability within distributed systems. A number of case studies are presenting to express the knowledge in a
platform- and programming language-independent manner.
Intelligent Expert systems can provide decisions for users for estimate from user preferences to find better destination from user profits. this present provides description of above system and suggest new approach for next researches.
Semantic Query Optimisation with Ontology Simulationdannyijwest
Â
Semantic Web is, without a doubt, gaining momentum in both industry and academia. The word âSemanticâ refers to âmeaningâ â a semantic web is a web of meaning. In this fast changing and result oriented practical world, gone are the days where an individual had to struggle for finding information on the Internet where knowledge management was the major issue. The semantic web has a vision of linking, integrating and analysing data from various data sources and forming a new information stream, hence a web of databases connected with each other and machines interacting with other machines to yield results which are user oriented and accurate. With the emergence of Semantic Web framework the naĂŻve approach of searching information on the syntactic web is clichĂŠ. This paper proposes an optimised semantic searching of keywords exemplified by simulation an ontology of Indian universities with a proposed algorithm which ramifies the effective semantic retrieval of information which is easy to access and time saving.
Web of Data as a Solution for Interoperability. Case StudiesSabin Buraga
Â
The paper draws several considerations regarding the use of Web of Data (Semantic Web) technologies â such as metadata vocabularies and ontological constructs â to increase the degree of interoperability within distributed systems. A number of case studies are presenting to express the knowledge in a
platform- and programming language-independent manner.
Linked Data Generation for the University Data From Legacy Database dannyijwest
Â
Web was developed to share information among the users through internet as some hyperlinked documents.
If someone wants to collect some data from the web he has to search and crawl through the documents to
fulfil his needs. Concept of Linked Data creates a breakthrough at this stage by enabling the links within
data. So, besides the web of connected documents a new web developed both for humans and machines, i.e.,
the web of connected data, simply known as Linked Data Web. Since it is a very new domain, still a very
few works has been done, specially the publication of legacy data within a University domain as Linked
Data.
Semantic - Based Querying Using Ontology in Relational Database of Library Ma...dannyijwest
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The traditional Web stores huge amount of data in the form of Relational Databases (RDB) as it is good at
storing objects and relationships between them. Relational Databases are dynamic in nature which allows
bringing tables together helping user to search for related material across multiple tables. RDB are
scalable to expand as the data grows. The RDB uses a Structured Query Language called SQL to access
the databases for several data retrieval purposes. As the world is moving today from the Syntactic form to
Semantic form and the Web is also taking its new form of Semantic Web. The Structured Query of the RDB
on web can be a Semantic Query on Semantic Web.
Improving Your Web Services Thorough Semantic Web TechniquesGihan Wikramanayake
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J P Liyanage, G N Wikramanayake (2006) "Improving Your Web Services Thorough Semantic Web Techniques" In: 8th International Information Technology Conference on Innovations for a Knowledge Economy, pp. 14-23 Infotel Lanka Society, Colombo, Sri Lanka: IITC Oct 12-13, ISBN: 955-8974-04-8
Introduction to semantic web. Includes its goal, features, why we need, semantic web related framework, RDF's, Advantages, Uniform resource locator, web ontology language, micro-formats.
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Nelson Piedra , Janneth Chicaiza
and Jorge LĂłpez, Universidad TĂŠcnica Particular de Loja, Edmundo
Tovar, Universidad PolitĂŠcnica de Madrid,
and Oscar MartĂnez, Universitas
Miguel HernĂĄndez
Explore the advantages of using linked data with OERs.
The Semantic Web is a vision of information that is understandable by computers. Although there is great exploitable potential, we are still in "Generation Zero'' of the Semantic Web, since there are few real-world compelling applications. The heterogeneity, the volume of data and the lack of standards are problems that could be addressed through some nature inspired methods. The paper presents the most important aspects of the Semantic Web, as well as its biggest issues; it then describes some methods inspired from nature - genetic algorithms, artificial neural networks, swarm intelligence, and the way these techniques can be used to deal with Semantic Web problems.
Discovering Resume Information using linked data  dannyijwest
Â
In spite of having different web applications to create and collect resumes, these web applications suffer
mainly from a common standard data model, data sharing, and data reusing. Though, different web
applications provide same quality of resume information, but internally there are many differences in terms
of data structure and storage which makes computer difficult to process and analyse the information from
different sources. The concept of Linked Data has enabled the web to share data among different data
sources and to discover any kind of information while resolving the issues like heterogeneity,
interoperability, and data reusing between different data sources and allowing machine process-able data
on the web.
Semantic Technology. Origins and Modern Enterprise Usemyankova
Â
With the help of Semantic Technology rather than locked into siloed, proprietary data formats that impede storage, access and retrieval, data pieces would seamlessly become interoperable and easy to integrate.
An introduction to linked data (semantic web) for a Knowledge and Information Network (KIN) webinar. The presentation shows some examples of linked data in action, data visualization, difference between open and linked data and how linkd data is being used in UK gov and local gov.
Linked Data Generation for the University Data From Legacy Database dannyijwest
Â
Web was developed to share information among the users through internet as some hyperlinked documents.
If someone wants to collect some data from the web he has to search and crawl through the documents to
fulfil his needs. Concept of Linked Data creates a breakthrough at this stage by enabling the links within
data. So, besides the web of connected documents a new web developed both for humans and machines, i.e.,
the web of connected data, simply known as Linked Data Web. Since it is a very new domain, still a very
few works has been done, specially the publication of legacy data within a University domain as Linked
Data.
Semantic - Based Querying Using Ontology in Relational Database of Library Ma...dannyijwest
Â
The traditional Web stores huge amount of data in the form of Relational Databases (RDB) as it is good at
storing objects and relationships between them. Relational Databases are dynamic in nature which allows
bringing tables together helping user to search for related material across multiple tables. RDB are
scalable to expand as the data grows. The RDB uses a Structured Query Language called SQL to access
the databases for several data retrieval purposes. As the world is moving today from the Syntactic form to
Semantic form and the Web is also taking its new form of Semantic Web. The Structured Query of the RDB
on web can be a Semantic Query on Semantic Web.
Improving Your Web Services Thorough Semantic Web TechniquesGihan Wikramanayake
Â
J P Liyanage, G N Wikramanayake (2006) "Improving Your Web Services Thorough Semantic Web Techniques" In: 8th International Information Technology Conference on Innovations for a Knowledge Economy, pp. 14-23 Infotel Lanka Society, Colombo, Sri Lanka: IITC Oct 12-13, ISBN: 955-8974-04-8
Introduction to semantic web. Includes its goal, features, why we need, semantic web related framework, RDF's, Advantages, Uniform resource locator, web ontology language, micro-formats.
This presentation is the culmination of my detail to the E-Government Office in the US Office of Management and Budget and the work I did to evolve and mature initiatives like recovery.gov and data.gov.
Nelson Piedra , Janneth Chicaiza
and Jorge LĂłpez, Universidad TĂŠcnica Particular de Loja, Edmundo
Tovar, Universidad PolitĂŠcnica de Madrid,
and Oscar MartĂnez, Universitas
Miguel HernĂĄndez
Explore the advantages of using linked data with OERs.
The Semantic Web is a vision of information that is understandable by computers. Although there is great exploitable potential, we are still in "Generation Zero'' of the Semantic Web, since there are few real-world compelling applications. The heterogeneity, the volume of data and the lack of standards are problems that could be addressed through some nature inspired methods. The paper presents the most important aspects of the Semantic Web, as well as its biggest issues; it then describes some methods inspired from nature - genetic algorithms, artificial neural networks, swarm intelligence, and the way these techniques can be used to deal with Semantic Web problems.
Discovering Resume Information using linked data  dannyijwest
Â
In spite of having different web applications to create and collect resumes, these web applications suffer
mainly from a common standard data model, data sharing, and data reusing. Though, different web
applications provide same quality of resume information, but internally there are many differences in terms
of data structure and storage which makes computer difficult to process and analyse the information from
different sources. The concept of Linked Data has enabled the web to share data among different data
sources and to discover any kind of information while resolving the issues like heterogeneity,
interoperability, and data reusing between different data sources and allowing machine process-able data
on the web.
Semantic Technology. Origins and Modern Enterprise Usemyankova
Â
With the help of Semantic Technology rather than locked into siloed, proprietary data formats that impede storage, access and retrieval, data pieces would seamlessly become interoperable and easy to integrate.
An introduction to linked data (semantic web) for a Knowledge and Information Network (KIN) webinar. The presentation shows some examples of linked data in action, data visualization, difference between open and linked data and how linkd data is being used in UK gov and local gov.
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A REVIEW ON SEMANTIC WEB
1. [Dhulekar et. al., Vol.6 (Iss.12): December 2019] ISSN: 2454-1907
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3595246
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A REVIEW ON SEMANTIC WEB
Miss. Komal U. Dhulekar 1, Miss. Madhuri P. Devrankar 1
1
MCA-III, Department of Research and PG Studies in Science & Management, Vidyabharati
Mahavidyalaya, Amravati, India
Abstract:
Semantic web is a concept that enables better machine processing of information on the web,
by structuring documents written for the web in such a way that they become understandable
by machines. This can be used for creating more complex applications (intelligent browsers,
more advanced web agents), etc. Semantic modeling languages like the Resource Description
Framework (RDF) and topic maps employ XML syntax to achieve this objective. New tools
exploit cross domain vocabularies to automatically extract and relate the meta information in
a new context. Web Ontology languages like DAML+OIL extend RDF with richer modeling
primitives and a provide a technological basis to enable the Semantic Web. The logic
languages for Semantic Web are described (which build on the of RDF and ontology
languages). They, together with digital signatures, enable a web of trust, which will have levels
of trust for its resources and for the rights of access, and will enable generating proofs, for the
actions and resources on the web.
Keywords: Semantics; Artificial Intelligence; Web 3.0; Search; Semantic Publishing; RDF;
Web Ontologies.
Cite This Article: Miss. Komal U. Dhulekar, and Miss. Madhuri P. Devrankar. (2019). âA
REVIEW ON SEMANTIC WEB.â International Journal of Engineering Technologies and
Management Research, 6(12), 22-28. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3595246.
1. Introduction
Web was designed as an information space, with the goal that it should be useful not human-
human communication, but also that machines would be able to participate and help. One of the
major obstacles to this has been the fact. The that most information on the web is designed for
human consumption, and even if it was derived from a database with well-defined meanings for
its columns, that the structure of the data is not evident to a robot browsing the web. Humans are
capable of using the Web to carry out tasks such as finding the Finnish word for âcarâ, to reserve
a library book, or to search for the cheapest DVD and buy it. However, a computer cannot
accomplish the same tasks without human direction to be read by people, not machines.
The Semantic Web is a vision of information that is understandable by computers, so that they
can perform more of the tedious works involved in finding, sharing and combining information
on the web. For example, a computer might be instructed to list the prices of flat screen HDTVs
larger than 40 inches with 1080p resolution at shops in the nearest town that are open until 8pm
on Tuesday evenings. Today, this task requires search engines that are individually tailored to
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every website being searched. The semantic web provides a common standard (RDF) for
websites to publish the relevant information in a more readily machine-processable and
integratable form.
1.1. What is Semantic Web?
The Semantic Web is an evolving extension of the World Wide Web in which the semantics of
information and services on the web to defined, making it possible for the web to understand and
satisfy the requests of people and machines to use the Web Content. It derives from W3C
director Tim Berner - Lee vision of the Web as a universal medium for data, information and
knowledge exchange.
1.2. WWW Vs Semantic Web
Current web contains a hypermedia, a digital library, a library of documents called (web pages)
interconnected by a hypermedia of links, a database, an application platform, a common portal to
applications accessible through web pages, and presenting their results as web pages, a platform
for multimedia, a naming scheme and Unique identity for those documents.
The World Wide Web is based mainly on documents written in Hyper Text Markup Language
(HTML), a markup convention that is used for coding a body of text interspersed with
multimedia objects such as image and interactive forms. The semantic web involves publishing
the data in a language, Resource Descriptive Framework (RDF) specifically for data, so that it
can be manipulated and combined just as can data files on a local computer. The HTML
language describes documents and the links between them. RDF, by contrast, describes arbitrary
things such as people, meetings, and airplane parts.
2. Components of Semantic Web
Several formats and language form the building blocks of the semantic web. Some of these
include Identifier (URI), Documents: Extensible Markup Language (XML), Statements:
Resource Description Framework (RDF), variety of data interchange formats (e.g. RDF/XML,
N3) and notations such as RDF Schemas (RDFS) and the Web Ontology Language (OWL), all
of which are intended to provide a formal description of concepts, terms and relationships within
a given knowledge domain, Logic, Proof and Trust.
Figure 1: The Semantic Web âlayer cakeâ presented by Tim Berners-Lee at the XML 2000
conference.
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2.1. Identifiers: Uniform Resources Locator (URI)
To identify items on the web, we use identifiers. Because we use a uniform system of identifiers,
and because each item identified is considered a âresourceâ, we call these identifiers âUniform
Resource Identifiersâ or URIs for short.
The URI is the foundation of the Web. While nearly every other part of the Web can be replaced,
the URI cannot: it holds the rest of the Web together. One familiar form of URI is the URL is an
address that lets you visit a web page, such as: http://www.w3org/Addressing/.
2.2. Documents: Extensible Markup Language (XML)
XML was designed to be a simple way to send documents across the Web. It allows anyone to
design their own document format and then write a document in that format. These document
formats can include markup to enhance the meaning of the documents content. This markup is
âmachine-readableâ, that is, programs can read and understand it. By including machine-readable
meaning in our documents, we make them much more powerful.
2.3. Statements: Resource Description Framework (RDF)
The most fundamental building block is Resource Description Framework (RDF), a format for
defining information on the web. RDF is a markup language for describing information and
resources on the web. Putting information and RDF files, makes it possible for computer
programs (âweb spidersâ) to search, discover, pick up, collect, analyse and process information
from the web. The Semantic Web uses RDF to describe web resources, RDF provides a model
for data, and a syntax so that independent parties can exchange and use it. It is designed to be
read and understood by computers. It is not designed for being displayed to people.
RDF triples can be written with XML tags, and they are represented graphically as shown below.
2.4. Schemas and ontologies: RDF Schemas, DAML+OIL, and WebOnt
A âschemaâ (plural âschemataâ) is simply a document or piece of code that controls a set of
terms in another document or piece of code. Itâs like a master checklist, or definition grammar.
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RDF Schemas
First three most important concepts that RDF and RDF Schema give us are the âResourceâ
(rdfs:Resource), the âClassâ (rdfs:Class), and the âPropertyâ (rdf:Property). These are all
âclassesâ, in that terms may belong to these classes
DAML+OIL
DAML is a language created by DARPA as
an ontology and inference language based upon RDF. DAML takes RDF Scheme a step further,
by giving us more in-depth properties and classes.
Inference
The principles of âinferenceâ is quite a simple one: being able to derive new data from data that
already know. In a mathematical sense, querying is a form of inference (being able to infer some
search results from a mass of data).
2.5. Logic
For the Semantic Web to become expressive enough to help us in a wide range of situations, it
will become necessary to construct a powerful logical language for making inferences.
2.6. Proof
Once we begin to build systems that follow logic, it makes sense to use them to prove things.
People all around the world could write logic statements. Then your machine could follow these
Semantic âlinksâ to construct proofs.
2.7. Trust: Digital Signature and Web of Trust
Now we can say that this whole plan is great, but rather useless if anyone can say anything. Who
would trust such as system? Thatâs where Digital Signature come in. Now itâs highly unlikely
that youâll trust enough people to make use of most of the things on the web. Thatâs where the
âWeb of Trustâ comes in.
3. Projects
3.1. FOAF
A popular application of the semantic web is Friend of a Friend (or FOAF), which describes
relationships among people and other agents in terms of RDF. FOAF project is about creating a
Web of machine-readable homepage describing people, the links between them and the things
they create and do.
3.2. SIOC
The SIOC Project - Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities provides a vocabulary of
terms and relationships that model web data spaces. Examples of such data spaces include,
among others: discussion forums, weblogs, blogrolls / feed subscriptions, mailing lists, shared
bookmarks, image galleries.
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3.3. SIMILE
Semantic Interoperability of Metadata and Information in un Like Environments Massachusetts
Institute of Technologies. SIMILE is a joint project, conducted by the MIT Libraries and MIT
CSALE which seeks to enhance interoperability among digital assets,
schemata/vocabularies/ontologies, meta data and services.
3.4. Linking Open Data
The Linking Open Data Project is a community lead effort to create lead openly accessible, and
interlinked, RDF Data on the Web. The data in question takes the form of RDF Data Sets drawn
from a broad collection of data sources.
4. Browsers
A semantic web Browser is a form of Web User Agent that expressly requests RDF data from
Web Servers using the best practise known as âContent Negotiationâ. These tools provide a user
interface that enables data-link oriented navigation of RDF data by dereferencing the data links
(URIs) in the RDF Data Sets returned by Web Servers.
Example of semantic web browsers include: Tabulator, DISCO, Open Link DF Browser Onto
Wiki Browser Crowbar â SIMILE.
5. Application Areas
The Semantic web offers many real-world applications that arise from the direct from the direct
impact it has on the World Wide Web. Real Time âScientific Publishingâ is being considered to
be the most important area to benefit from âSemantic Publishingâ. This directly transforms
collaboration trends in Life Sciences and Health Care. Besides other areas expected to go
through the wave are:
⢠Ambient Intelligence
⢠Semantic Search and Indexing
⢠Cognitive Systems
⢠Data Integration
⢠Multimedia Data Management
6. Agents and Services
I describe a vision of intelligent web agents using the analogy of travel agents - rather than doing
everything for a user, the agents would find possible ways to meet user needs, and offer the user
choices for their achievement. Much as a travel agent might give you a list of several flights you
could take or a choice of flying vs. taking a train, a web agent should offer a slate of possible
ways to get you what you need on the web.
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Figure 2: A potential service class and its properties on the Semantic Web
7. Benefits of The Semantic Web
⢠Information is captured in a language agnostic format.
⢠A central repository for knowledge is created.
⢠More precise, relevant information is captured.
⢠Processes and procedures are mapped to data sources.
⢠One collective view of knowledge across enterprise application is created.
As a Result
⢠Point-to-point integration becomes obsolete.
⢠Application integration is easy and efficient.
⢠Superfluous data decreases.
⢠Knowledge across applications becomes consistent.
⢠Upgrades and maintenance are simplified.
8. Conclusion
Human Reasoning is a result of certain relationships amongst objects, processes etc. that we have
in our minds. The Semantic Web can be said to perform similar reasoning based upon the
relationships that we define in web data through RDF. These relationships that we have are also
more or less common to many others in the society, which makes our reasoning of practical
sense to others.
Similarly, a âcommon vocabulary of relationshipsâ is established for interoperable use through
Web Ontologies. The OWL provides a way to enhance this vocabulary. With these and many
other basic principles, the Semantic Web, the web of data (in its rightful sense), users amazing
new ways in which we would use the web.
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References
[1] Tim Berners-Lee, J. Hendler, and O. Lassila, âThe Semantic Webâ, Scientific American, May
2001, pp. 34-43 http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=the-semantic-web
[2] âThe Semantic Webâ by Wikipedia, athttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/semantic_web
[3] âW3C Semantic Web Frequently Asked Questionsâ. W3C. http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/SW-
FAQ. Retrieved March 13, 2008.
[4] Lee Feigenbaum (May 1, 2007). âThe Semantic Web in Actionâ. Scientific American.
http://www.thefigtrees.net/lee/sw/sciam/semantic-web-in-action. Retrieved February 24 , 2010.
[5] Victoria Shannon (June 26,2006). âA âmore revolutionaryâ Webâ. International Herald Tribune.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/05/23/business/web.php. Retrieved May 24,2006.
[6] âGood Relations Project MainPageâ. http://purl.org/goodrelations/.
[7] van Herman (2007). âState of the Semantic Webâ. Semantic Days 2007.
http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0424-Stavanger-IH/Slides.pdf. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
[8] http://www.w3school.com/rdf
[9] http://www.w3.org/RDF/FAQ
[10] http://policywareweb.org
*Corresponding author.
E-mail address: komaldhulekar96@ gmail.com/ madhuridevrankar@ gmail.com