09929cam a22004097a 4500
15888707
20121024125238.0
090901s2009 gw a b 000 0 eng
7
cbc
copycat
2
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acquire
2 shelf copies
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pc17 2009-09-01
xh00 2010-01-22 to USPL/STM
th63 2011-06-07 to uspl/stm
th57 2012-07-19 z-processor to US ANGLO
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2009936149
GBA952677
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015266675
Uk
9783642011719 (hbk.)
3642011713 (hbk.)
9783642011726 (e-ISBN)
3642011721 (e-ISBN)
(OCoLC)ocn360145000
UKM
UKM
YDXCP
BTCTA
NLGGC
BWX
OHX
C#P
MUU
CEF
EUM
HDC
DLC
lccopycat
TK5105.88815
.B755 2009
025.0427
22
54.84
bcl
Breslin, John G.
(John Gerard)
The social semantic web /
John G. Breslin, Alexandre Passant, Stefan Decker.
Heidelberg ;
New York :
Springer,
c2009.
ix, 300 p. :
ill. ;
25 cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
The social web (including services such as MySpace, Flickr, last.fm, and WordPress) has captured the attention of millions of users as well as billions of dollars in investment and acquisition.
1
Introduction to the book
1 --
1.1
Overview
1 --
1.2
Aims of the book, and who will benefit from it?
3 --
1.3
Structure of the book
4 --
1.3.1
Motivation for applying Semantic Web technologies to the Social Web
5 --
1.3.2
Introduction to the Social Web (Web 2.0, social media, social software)
5 --
1.3.3
Adding semantics to the Web
6 --
1.3.4
Discussions
6 --
1.3.5
Knowledge and information sharing
6 --
1.3.6
Multimedia sharing
7 --
1.3.7
Social tagging
7 --
1.3.8
Social sharing of software
7 --
1.3.9
Social networks
8 --
1.3.10
Interlinking online communities
8 --
1.3.11
Social Web applications in enterprise
8 --
1.3.12
Towards the Social Semantic Web
9 --
2
Motivation for applying Semantic Web technologies to the Social Web
11 --
2.1
Web 2.0 and the Social Web
11 --
2.2
Addressing limitations in the Social Web with semantics
13 --
2.3
The Social Semantic Web: more than the sum of its parts
15 --
2.4
A food chain of applications for the Social Semantic Web
17 --
2.5
A practical Social Semantic Web
19 --
3
Introduction to the Social Web (Web 2.0, social media, social software)
21 --
3.1
from the Web to a Social Web
21 --
3.2
Common technologies and trends
25 --
3.2.1
RSS
25 --
3.2.2
AJAX
27 --
3.2.3
Mashups
28 --
3.2.4
Advertising
30 --
3.2.5
The Web on any device
32 --
3.2.6
Content delivery
34 --
3.2.7
Cloud computing
35 --
3.2.8
Folksonomies
38 --
3.3
Object-centred sociality
39 --
3.4
Licensing content
42 --
3.5
Be careful before you post
42 --
3.6
Disconnects in the Social Web
44 --
4
Adding semantics to the Web
45 --
4.1
A brief history
45 --
4.2
The need for semantics
47 --
4.3
Metadata
51 --
4.3.1
Resource Description Framework (RDF)
52 --
4.3.2
The RDF syntax
54 --
4.4
Ontologies
56 --
4.4.1
RDF Schema
59 --
4.4.2
Web Ontology Language (OWL)
61 --
4.5
SPARQL
62 --
4.6
The 'lowercase' semantic web, including microformats
64 --
4.7
Semantic search
66 --
4.8
Linking Open Data
67 --
4.9
Semantic mashups
69 --
4.10
Addressing the Semantic Web 'chicken-and-egg' problem
71 --
5
Discussions
75 --
5.1
The world of boards, blogs and now microblogs
75 --
5.2
Blogging
76 --
5.2.1
The growth of blogs
77 --
5.2.2
Structured blogging
79 --
5.2.3
Semantic blogging
81 --
5.3
Microblogging
85 --
5.3.1
The Twitter phenomenon
88 --
5.3.2
Semantic microblogging
89 --
5.4
Message boards
91 --
5.4.1
Categories and tags on message boards
92 --
5.4.2
Characteristics of forums
94 --
5.4.3
Social networks on message boards
97 --
5.5
Mailing lists and IRC
100 --
6
Knowledge and information sharing
103 --
6.1
Wikis
103 --
6.1.1
The Wikipedia
105 --
6.1.2
Semantic wikis
105 --
6.1.3
DBpedia
110 --
6.1.4
Semantics-based reputation in the Wikipedia
111 --
6.2
Other knowledge services leveraging semantics
112 --
6.2.1
Twine
112 --
6.2.2
The Internet Archive
115 --
6.2.3
Powerset
117 --
6.2.4
OpenLink Data Spaces
119 --
6.2.5
Freebase
119 --
7
Multimedia sharing
121 --
7.1
Multimedia management
121 --
7.2
Photo-sharing services
122 --
7.2.1
Modelling RDF data from Flickr
123 --
7.2.3
Annotating images using Semantic Web technologies
125 --
7.3
Podcasts
126 --
7.3.1
Audio podcasts
127 --
7.3.2
Video podcasts
129 --
7.3.3
Adding semantics to podcasts
131 --
7.4
Music-related content
133 --
7.4.1
DBTune and the Music Ontology
133 --
7.4.2
Combining social music and the Semantic Web
134 --
8
Social tagging
137 --
8.1
Tags, tagging and folksonomies
137 --
8.1.1
Overview of tagging
137 --
8.1.2
Issues with free-form tagging systems
140 --
8.2
Tags and the Semantic Web
142 --
8.2.1
Mining taxonomies and ontologies from folksonomies
143 --
8.2.2
Modelling folksonomies using Semantic Web technologies
144 --
8.3
Tagging applications using Semantic Web technologies
148 --
8.3.1
Annotea
148 --
8.3.2
Revyu.com
149 --
8.3.3
SweetWiki
151 --
8.3.4
int.ere.st
151 --
8.3.5
LODr
152 --
8.3.6
Atom Interface
153 --
8.3.7
Faviki
154 --
8.4
Advanced querying capabilities thanks to semantic tagging
155 --
8.4.1
Show items with the tag 'semanticweb' on any platform
155 --
8.4.2
List the ten latest items tagged by Alexandre on SlideShare
155 --
8.4.3
List the tags used by Alex on SlideShare and by John on Flickr
157 --
8.4.4
Retrieve any content tagged with something relevant to the Semantic Web field
158 --
9
Social sharing of software
159 --
9.1
Software widgets, applications and projects
159 --
9.2
Description of a Project (DOAP)
160 --
9.2.1
Examples of DOAP use
161 --
9.3
Crawling and browsing software descriptions
164 --
9.4
Querying project descriptions and related data
166 --
9.4.1
Locating software projects from people you trust
166 --
9.4.2
Locating a software project related to a particular topic
167 --
10
Social networks
169 --
10.1
Overview of social networks
169 --
10.2
Online social networking services
173 --
10.3
Some psychology behind SNS usage
175 --
10.4
Niche social networks
177 --
10.5
Addressing some limitations of social networks
179 --
10.6
Friend-of-a-Friend (FOAF)
181 --
10.6.1
Consolidation of people objects
184 --
10.6.2
Aggregating a person's web contributions
186 --
10.6.3
Inferring relationships from aggregated data
187 --
10.7
hCard and XFN
189 --
10.8
The Social Graph API and OpenSocial
190 --
10.8.1
The Social Graph API
190 --
10.8.2
OpenSocial
192 --
10.9
The Facebook Platform
193 --
10.10
Some social networking initiatives from the W3C
194 --
10.11
A social networking stack
194 --
11
Interlinking online communities
197 --
11.1
The need for semantics in online communities
197 --
11.2
Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities (SIOC)
198 --
11.2.1
The SIOC ontology
201 --
11.2.2
SIOC metadata format
203 --
11.2.3
SIOC modules
205 --
11.3
Expert finding in online communities
206 --
11.3.1
FOAF for expert finding
208 --
11.3.2
SIOC for expert finding
209 --
11.4
Connections between community description formats
211 --
11.5
Distributed conversations and channels
212 --
11.6
SIOC applications
215 --
11.7
A food chain for SIOC data
216 --
11.7.1
SIOC producers
218 --
11.7.2
SIOC collectors
223 --
11.7.3
SIOC consumers
224 --
11.8
RDFa for interlinking online communities
231 --
11.9
Argumentative discussions in online communities
234 --
11.10
Object-centred sociality in online communities
236 --
11.11
Data portability in online communities
238 --
11.11.1
The DataPortability working group
238 --
11.11.2
Data portability with FOAF and SIOC
240 --
11.11.3
Connections between portability efforts
241 --
11.12
Online communities for health care and life sciences
242 --
11.12.1
Semantic Web Applications in Neuromedicine
243 --
11.12.2
Science Collaboration Framework
244 --
11.12.3
bio-zen and the art of scientific community maintenance
246 --
11.13
Online presence
246 --
11.14
Online attention
247 --
11.15
The SIOC data competition
247 --
12
Social Web applications in enterprise
251 --
12.1
Overview of Enterprise 2.0
251 --
12.2
Issues with Enterprise 2.0
255 --
12.2.1
Social and philosophical issues with Enterprise 2.0
255 --
12.2.1
Technical issues with Enterprise 2.0
258 --
12.3
Improving Enterprise 2.0 ecosystems with semantic technologies
262 --
12.3.1
Introducing SemSLATES
262 --
12.3.2
Implementing semantics in Enterprise 2.0 ecosystems
263 --
12.3.3
SIOC for collaborative work environments
266 --
13
Towards the Social Semantic Web
269 --
13.1
Possibilities for the Social Semantic Web
269 --
13.2
A community-guided Social Semantic Web
271 --
13.2.1
Wisdom of the crowds and the Semantic Web
272 --
13.2.2
A grassroots approach
273 --
13.2.3
The vocabulary onion
275 --
13.3
Integrating with the Social Semantic Desktop
278 --
13.4
Privacy and identity on the Social Semantic Web
279 --
13.4.1
Keeping privacy in mind
279 --
13.4.2
Identity fragmentation
280 --
13.5
The vision of a Social Semantic Web
281.
Semantic Web.
World Wide Web
Social aspects.
Online social networks.
Passant, Alexandre.
Decker, Stefan
(Stefan Josef),
1968-
mcun copy FY13