Semantic Web: Difference between revisions

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==Semantic Web in CMS==
Content management systems (CMS) can benefit greatly from RDF features.  RDF is an expressive means by which CMS can both publish and consume data.  Because RDF makes data more easily machine readable it is perfect for systems that integrate data (such as CMS).
The [http://drupal.org Drupal] content management system is making a big push to include RDF and semantic web as part of the upcoming Drupal 7 release.  There is a [http://groups.drupal.org/semantic-web Drupal group] devoted to semantic web as well as a [http://drupal.org/node/443824 code sprint] devoted to the topic.  With over
==References==
==References==
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Revision as of 18:10, 2 August 2010

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The Semantic web is a concept, first named by Tim Berners-Lee, for a "web of knowledge" in which world wide web documents' contents would be annotated and classified so that computers can parse the classifications and provide search results based on the semantic information (what the content means), rather than simply on matching of text strings. There is also a W3C standards effort[1] related to this concept.

What differentiates the Semantic Web from existing data structures is the use of URIs to uniquely identify things, and relationships between things. The sort of problem scenario that Semantic Web technologies try to solve are those involving multiple disparate source of data - for instance, hooking together train timetables and class timetables, so a student can automatically plan their travel itinerary without having to manually match the data together.

The W3C have put forward a variety of standards built on top of the Resource Description Framework, a formal semantic model for representing things and the relationships between them.

Domain-specific semantic models

Medicine

Semantic models seem the major trend in expert support to medicine. As an example of how semantic methodologies are used, consider several isolated concepts, which could be considered "nouns":

One of the notations for relationships is the Unified Medical Language System® (UMLS®). Informally, some of the "verb" semantic relationships among the above could be:

  • beta-adrenergic antagonists TREAT hypertension and benign hand tremor
  • beta-adrenergic antagonists CAUSE bradycardia
  • beta-adrenergic antagonists TRIGGER asthma

"Hypertension" would have a number of other TREATS relations, from drug classes such as thiazide diuretics, angiotensin-II converting enzyme antagonists, calcium channel blockers, angiotensin-II receptor blockers, etc.

ULMS is now being extended with formal ontologies: [2]

Semantic Web in CMS

Content management systems (CMS) can benefit greatly from RDF features. RDF is an expressive means by which CMS can both publish and consume data. Because RDF makes data more easily machine readable it is perfect for systems that integrate data (such as CMS).

The Drupal content management system is making a big push to include RDF and semantic web as part of the upcoming Drupal 7 release. There is a Drupal group devoted to semantic web as well as a code sprint devoted to the topic. With over

References

  1. W3C Semantic Web Frequently Asked Questions. [[1]] (2010). Retrieved on 2010-07-11.
  2. Burgun, Anita & Olivier Bodenreider, Mapping the UMLS Semantic Network into General Ontologies