Semantic web programming

著者

    • Hebeler, John
    • Fisher, Matthew
    • Blace, Ryan
    • Perez-Lopez, Andrew

書誌事項

Semantic web programming

John Hebeler .... [et al.]

Wiley, c2009

  • : pbk

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注記

Other authors: Matthew Fisher, Ryan Blace, Andrew Perez-Lopez

Foreword by Mike Dean

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The next major advance in the Web-Web 3.0-will be built on semantic Web technologies, which will allow data to be shared and reused across application, enterprise, and community boundaries. Written by a team of highly experienced Web developers, this book explains examines how this powerful new technology can unify and fully leverage the ever-growing data, information, and services that are available on the Internet. Helpful examples demonstrate how to use the semantic Web to solve practical, real-world problems while you take a look at the set of design principles, collaborative working groups, and technologies that form the semantic Web. The companion Web site features full code, as well as a reference section, a FAQ section, a discussion forum, and a semantic blog.

目次

Foreword xxiii Introduction xxv Part One Introducing Semantic Web Programming 1 Chapter 1 Preparing to Program a Semantic Web of Data 3 Defining the Semantic Web 4 Identifying the Major Programming Components 10 Determining Impacts on Programming 13 Establishing a Web Data-Centric Perspective 13 Expressing Semantic Data 14 Sharing Data 16 Making Data Dynamic and Flexible 18 Avoiding the Roadblocks, Myths, and Hype 19 Semantic Web Roadblocks 19 Semantic Web Myths 21 Semantic Web Hype 22 Understanding Semantic Web Origins 23 Exploring Semantic Web Examples 26 Semantic Wikis (semantic-mediawiki.org) 26 Twine (www.twine.com) 27 The FOAF Project (www.foaf-project.org) 28 RDFa and Microformats 30 Semantic Query Endpoint (dbpedia.org/sparql) 32 Semantic Search (www.trueknowledge.com) 32 Summary and Onward 34 Notes 34 Chapter 2 Hello Semantic Web World 35 Setting Up Your Semantic Web Development Environment 36 Programming the Hello Semantic Web World Application 38 Summary 58 Part Two Foundations of Semantic Web Programming 61 Chapter 3 Modeling Information 63 Modeling Information in Software 64 Sharing Information: Syntax and Semantics 65 Serialized Objects 66 Relational Databases 66 Extensible Markup Language (XML) 66 Metadata and Data in Information Sharing 67 The Semantic Web Information Model: The Resource Description Framework (RDF) 68 Nodes: Resources and Literals 69 Edges: Predicates 71 Exchanging Information with RDF 72 Statements as Points 73 RDF Serializations 74 RDF/XML 74 Terse RDF Triple Language (Turtle) 78 N-Triples 81 Quick Hack 82 More RDF 84 Blank Nodes 84 Reification 88 RDF Organizational Constructs 88 Summary 91 Chapter 4 Incorporating Semantics 93 Semantics on the Web 94 Motivating Factors 94 Understanding the World WideWeb 95 Knowledge Domain Integration 97 Expressing Semantics in RDF 98 Vocabularies, Taxonomies, and Ontologies 99 A Vocabulary Language for RDF 100 An Ontology Language for the Web 101 Introduction to Ontologies 102 Distributed Knowledge 102 Open World Assumption 103 No Unique Names Assumption 104 Overview of Ontology Elements 104 Ontology Header 105 Classes and Individuals 105 Properties 106 Annotations 106 Data types 106 Elements of an Ontology 107 OWL 2 Typing 107 Ontology Header 108 Annotations 109 Basic Classification 110 Classes and Individuals 110 rdfs:SubClassOf 111 Instance versus Subclass 112 owl:Thing and owl:Nothing 113 Defining and Using Properties 113 Property Domain and Range 114 Describing Properties 115 rdfs:subPropertyOf 115 Top and Bottom Properties 116 Inverse Properties 116 Disjoint Properties 117 Property Chains 118 Symmetric, Reflexive, and Transitive Properties 119 Functional and Inverse Functional Properties 120 Keys 121 Datatypes 122 Data type Restrictions 122 Defining Datatypes in Terms of Other Datatypes 124 Negative Property Assertions 126 Property Restrictions 127 Value Restrictions 127 Cardinality Restrictions 130 Qualified Cardinality Restrictions 132 Advanced Class Description 134 Enumerating Class Membership 134 Set Operators 134 Disjoint Classes 136 Equivalence in OWL 137 Equivalence among Individuals 138 Equivalence among Classes and Properties 139 Summary 139 Chapter 5 Modeling Knowledge in the Real World 141 Exploring the Components of the Semantic Web 141 Semantic Web Frameworks 143 Storing and Retrieving RDF 144 RDF Store Implementations 144 Retrieving Information in a Knowledgebase 146 Realizing the Semantics of OWL 147 Understanding Forward Chaining Inference 148 Understanding Backward Chaining Inference 152 Choosing the Right Inference Method 153 Common Frameworks and Components 153 RDF Store Implementations 154 Retrieval Components 156 Reasoning Engines 156 Knowledgebase Performance 157 Exploring the Profiles of OWL 158 OWL Full and OWL DL 159 The Profiles of OWL 160 OWL EL 160 OWL QL 161 OWL RL 162 Demonstrating OWL Inference 163 The Ontology 163 The Example Application 165 The Results 169 Performing No Inference 169 Performing RDFS Inference 170 Performing OWL Inference 171 Working with Ontologies 172 Decoupling the Knowledge Model from the Application 173 Sharing across Domain and Application Boundaries 174 What Is a Foundational Ontology? 175 Common Foundational Ontologies 177 BFO 177 Cyc and OpenCyc 178 DOLCE 179 SUMO 179 Dublin Core Metadata Initiative 179 FOAF 180 GeoRSS and OWL-Time 180 Finding Ontologies to Reuse or Extend 181 Choosing the Right Foundational Ontologies 183 Summary 184 Chapter 6 Discovering Information 185 Navigating the Semantic Web 186 Searching the Semantic Web 190 Querying the Semantic Web 192 Quickstart with SPARQL 192 Four Foundational Query Forms 196 SELECT Essentials 197 RDF Datasets, FROM and FROM NAMED 202 Query Modifiers 208 DISTINCT 209 REDUCED 210 ORDER BY 210 Data Streaming with OFFSET and LIMIT 211 Flexible Querying with FILTER and OPTIONAL 213 FILTER 213 OPTIONAL 215 UNION 219 CONSTRUCT Essentials 222 DESCRIBE Essentials 224 ASK Essentials 225 SPARQL Entailment 226 Unsupported Functionality 228 Data Modification 228 Subqueries 228 Aggregation 228 Summary 229 Chapter 7 Adding Rules 231 What Are Rules? 232 Reasons for Rules 232 No Support for Property Composition 232 Use of Built-ins 232 Ontological Mediation 233 Limiting Assumptions 233 Rule Languages 233 SWRL Essentials 234 The Abstract Syntax 235 The XML Concrete Syntax 237 var 238 imp 239 _rlab 239 _body 239 _head 240 classAtom 240 datarangeAtom 241 individualPropertyAtom 241 datavaluedPropertyAtom 242 sameIndividualAtom 242 differentIndividualsAtom 243 builtinAtom 243 The RDF Concrete Syntax 243 Built-ins 244 Examples 244 DL-Safe Rules 245 Ontological Mediation 252 Mapping Friends without Upsetting Any of Them 253 The Power of Rules 256 Jena Rules 257 Rule Interchange Format 259 Delving into the Details 260 The Future of RIF 260 Summary 261 Part Three Building Semantic Web Applications 263 Chapter 8 Applying a Programming Framework 265 Framing the Semantic Web 266 The Jena SemanticWeb Framework 269 Defining Jena Programming Concepts 269 Programming with Jena 273 Establishing the Jena Development Environment 276 Establishing the Knowledgebase: Setting Up the Model 276 Populating the Model with Semantic Web Data 279 Combining Semantic Web Data 282 Interrogating Semantic Web Data 283 Reasoning across Semantic Web Data 285 Exporting Semantic Web Data 290 Deallocating Semantic Web Data Resources 290 Managing Semantic Web Data 291 Getting Information Regarding Your Semantic Web Data 291 Generating Events Based on Semantic Web Data 292 Dealing with Concurrency and Your Semantic Web Data 293 Customizing the Jena Framework 295 Serializing Semantic Web Data 297 Common App Overview: FriendTracker 298 Summary 299 Chapter 9 Combining Information 301 Combining Information 303 Representing Information 303 Translating between Representations 304 Addressing the Challenges of Translation 305 Maintaining Fidelity 305 Tracking Provenance Information 305 Reversing the Process 306 Handling Varying Data 306 Managing Data Volume 306 Introducing the FriendTracker Data Sources 307 Facebook XML Web Service 307 Jabber Java Client 308 Upcoming.org XML Web Service 308 WordPress Relational Database 308 Exposing XML-Based Web Services as RDF 309 Introducing the Weather.gov XML Feed 310 Exposing XML Using XSL Transformations 311 Traversing XML Documents with XPath 313 Applying XSLT to a Simple Example 315 Processing XML and XSLT Programmatically 319 Applying XSLT to the Facebook Data Source 322 Weighing the Benefits and the Costs of XSLT 326 Exposing XML Using XML Bindings and Velocity 328 Generating Java Bindings for XML Data 329 Unmarshalling XML Data into Java 331 Introducing the Velocity Template Engine 333 Generating RDF with Velocity 336 Weighing the Benefits and the Costs 336 Exposing Relational Databases as RDF 337 Exposing a WordPress Blog Using D2RQ 338 Creating D2RQ Mappings for the WordPress Database 339 Wrapping the D2RQ Instance in a Jena Model 341 Querying the D2RQ Exposed WordPress Database 342 Weighing the Benefits and the Costs of D2RQ 345 Exposing Other Sources of Data 346 Exposing Jabber with a Custom Streaming RDF Writer 346 Exposing Java Objects Using Reflection 352 Applying the RDF Generator to the Weather.gov XML Feed 356 Applying the RDF Generator to the Upcoming.org XML Feed 358 Summary 359 Chapter 10 Aligning Information 361 Data Source, Domain, and Application Ontologies 361 Aligning Ontologies 362 Ontology Constructs 363 Translation via Rules 365 Explicit Translation 365 Ad Hoc Approaches to Translation 366 FriendTracker 366 Aligning Ontologies with OWL and SWRL 372 Aligning Ontologies with XSLT 376 Aligning Ontologies with Code 381 Aligning Simple Ontologies with RDFS 382 Record Linkage 385 Summary 388 Chapter 11 Sharing Information 389 Microformats 390 eRDF 392 RDFa 395 Supported Attributes 396 xmlns 396 rel 396 rev 398 content 398 href 399 src 399 about 399 property 399 resource 400 datatype 401 typeof 401 Blank Nodes 402 Language Support 403 Tools and Frameworks 404 RDF Transformational Tools 404 SPARQL Endpoints 404 Joseki Installation and Operation 405 xOperator 408 Installation and Operation 409 Example Query 410 FriendTracker in RDFa 411 Summary 417 Part Four Expanding Semantic Web Programming 419 Chapter 12 Developing and Using Semantic Services 421 Background 422 Discovery 424 Invocation 424 Negotiation 425 Error Handling 425 Monitoring 425 Composition 425 Implementing Semantic Services 426 Semantic Markup for Web Services 427 ServiceProfile 428 ServiceModel 428 ServiceGrounding 428 Web Service Modeling Ontology 429 Semantic Annotations for WSDL 432 SAWSDL Example 433 SAWSDL Tools 434 Summary 435 Chapter 13 Managing Space and Time 437 Space and Time in Software 437 Spatial Information 438 Temporal Information 440 Representing Spatiotemporal Data on the SemanticWeb 441 Spatial and Temporal Software with Jena 450 Working with Spatial Data 452 Example: Spatial Queries 453 Framing the Problem 453 Approach and Rationale 454 Components 454 Example: Transaction Time-Bounded Queries 461 Framing the Problem 461 Approach and Rationale 462 Components 462 Summary 465 Notes 465 Chapter 14 Semantic Web Patterns and Best Practices 467 Aggregating Disparate Data Sources 468 Exposing Data Sources as RDF 469 Bringing Data into the Domain Knowledge Model 470 Storing Information in the Knowledgebase 472 Initiating the Flow of Data 472 Annotating Unstructured Data 472 Annotation Management 474 Ontology Management 475 Unstructured Data Sources and the Client Application 476 Coordinating Semantic Services 478 Applying SemanticWeb Best Practices 480 Creating URIs 480 Making URIs Unique 480 Making URIs Consistent 481 Making URIs Resolvable 483 Specifying Units of Measurement 483 Unit-Specific Properties and Datatypes 484 Statement Reification 485 Value Containers 485 Representing N-ary Relationships 486 Managing Bad Data 487 Summary 487 Chapter 15 Moving Forward 489 Advancing Ontologies 491 Ontology Repositories and Registries 491 Linked Data 492 Versioning 493 Ontology Metrics 495 Advancing Integration 497 Semantic Pipes 497 Distributed Queries 498 Alignment 500 Advancing Reasoning 506 Rule Interchange Format (RIF) 506 Probabilistic Reasoning 507 Trust: Proof Markup Language 510 LarKC: The Large Knowledge Collider 512 Advancing Visualization 513 Summary 516 Appendix A RDF 519 Appendix B The OWL Web Ontology Language 525 Appendix C SWRL 533 Appendix D SPARQL 555 Appendix E Jena Reference Guide 567 Appendix F Installation Reference Guide 577 Index 585

「Nielsen BookData」 より

詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BA90241008
  • ISBN
    • 9780470418017
  • 出版国コード
    us
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Indianapolis, IN
  • ページ数/冊数
    xxix, 616 p.
  • 大きさ
    24 cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
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