1. Fresnel: A Browser-Independent Presentation Vocabulary for RDF
- Author
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David R. Karger, Ryan Lee, Christian Bizer, Emmanuel Pietriga, Situated interaction (IN-SITU), Laboratoire de Recherche en Informatique (LRI), Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-CentraleSupélec-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-CentraleSupélec-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Inria Saclay - Ile de France, Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique (Inria)-Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique (Inria), Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaft, Freie Universität Berlin, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory [Cambridge] (CSAIL), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and Decentralized Information Group (DIG)
- Subjects
Vocabulary ,Information retrieval ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,RDF Schema ,[INFO.INFO-WB]Computer Science [cs]/Web ,02 engineering and technology ,computer.file_format ,Linked data ,RDF/XML ,World Wide Web ,020204 information systems ,Simple Knowledge Organization System ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,SPARQL ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,[INFO.INFO-HC]Computer Science [cs]/Human-Computer Interaction [cs.HC] ,RDF ,Cwm ,computer ,Semantic Web ,media_common - Abstract
Semantic Web browsers and other tools aimed at displaying RDF data to end users are all concerned with the same problem: presenting content primar- ily intended for machine consumption in a human-readable way. Their solutions differ but in the end address the same two high-level issues, no matter the un- derlying representation paradigm: specifying (i) what information contained in RDF models should be presented (content selection) and (ii) how this informa- tion should be presented (content formatting and styling). However, each tool cur- rently relies on its own ad hoc mechanisms and vocabulary for specifying RDF presentation knowledge, making it difficult to share and reuse such knowledge across applications. Recognizing the general need for presenting RDF content to users and wanting to promote the exchange of presentation knowledge, we designed Fresnel as a browser-independent vocabulary of core RDF display con- cepts. In this paper we describe Fresnel's main concepts and present several RDF browsers and visualization tools that have adopted the vocabulary so far.
- Published
- 2006
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