Matches in Nanopublications for { ?s <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#comment> ?o ?g. }
- assertion comment "The authors state that for their proposed system, 'the streaming element (i.e. a single message) (...) is a set of triples'. Therefore, internally it uses an RDF graph stream." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed system (IPSM) outputs to Kafka a stream of RDF datasets. This can be observed in IPSM's source code from the INTER-IoT project." assertion.
- assertion comment "The DBpedia-Live service published two streams of RDF graphs – for added and deleted triples." assertion.
- assertion comment "At a high level, ERI streams a flat sequence of triples." assertion.
- assertion comment "ERI splits the flat RDF triple stream into discrete elements (blocks). Each block is an RDF graph, therefore ERI uses an RDF graph stream on this level." assertion.
- assertion comment "ERI splits the incoming flat RDF triple stream into discrete blocks, which are then split into a sequence of subject-molecules (RDF subgraphs with a single subject). Thus, within the scope of a a single block, ERI uses an RDF subject graph stream." assertion.
- assertion comment "The presented solution (Graph of Things) appears to use RDF graph streams, as can be inferred from Fig. 1. There, a single "snapshot" (element) of the stream is presented to be an RDF graph." assertion.
- assertion comment "Jelly streams a flat sequence of triples or quads, on a high level." assertion.
- assertion comment "Jelly splits the incoming flat RDF stream into discrete elements (stream frames) that are either RDF graphs or RDF datasets. Therefore, on the lower level it uses RDF dataset/graph streams." assertion.
- assertion comment "The authors mention that flat RDF triple streams are sometimes used, however, they advocate for the use of RDF graph streams (Requirement #5)." assertion.
- assertion comment "The paper calls for using streams of RDF graphs for social media monitoring (Requirement #5)." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed EXI-based protocol streams RDF graphs over the network." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed RDSZ protocol stream RDF graphs over the network." assertion.
- assertion comment "The RSP Data Model introduces the RDF Stream as a stream of timestamped named graphs, with the same structure as in RDF-STaX. The RDF-STaX definition was in fact derived from the RSP Data Model." assertion.
- assertion comment "The RSP Data Model draft specifies in section "Timestamped Graphs" that "A sequence of RDF graphs (or named graphs, or RDF datasets) MAY be physically received by an RSP engine, which MAY then create an RDF stream from it by adding timestamps, e.g. indicating the time of arrival. The original sequence is not itself an RDF stream."" assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed S-HDT protocol streams RDF graphs over a serial connection." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed TA-RDF model for temporal/streaming RDF has a direct translation to RDF. In that translation, each element in the stream corresponds to an RDF subgraph, with a specific node indicating the subject of the element." assertion.
- assertion comment "In the proposed approach, an RDF stream is published as a sequence of RDF graphs, with each graph having a unique URI. Each URI points to a node (the subject) within one of the graphs." assertion.
- assertion comment "RMLMapper-SISO outputs a stream of results of the RML annotation process, which should be a stream of datasets. However, the source code of the application appears only to be able to handle outputting RDF graphs. I am not sure whether this is right or not." assertion.
- assertion comment "The output of the Semantic Annotation enabler from ASSIST-IoT is a stream of RDF datasets." assertion.
- assertion comment "The approach describes RDF streams which are represented using named graphs as elements. Each graph is associated with a temporal property in the default graph." assertion.
- assertion comment "The paper discusses a model for temporal RDF which is represented with each stream element being a named graph. The named graph has temporal information about it in the default graph." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed approach (TripleWave) uses the RSP Data Model to represent its streams." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed approach (TripleWave) uses the RSP Data Model to represent its streams." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed approach uses the RSP Data Model to represent its streams." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed approach uses the RSP Data Model to represent its streams." assertion.
- assertion comment "Apache Jena RIOT has facilities for streaming RDF statements (triples or quads) to/from byte streams using a number of serializations." assertion.
- assertion comment "RDF4J Rio has facilities for streaming RDF statements (triples or quads) to/from byte streams." assertion.
- assertion comment "The proposed streaming SPARQL engine consumes a stream of RDF triple statements." assertion.
- assertion comment "The reference implementation of SPARQL-Generate can output a stream of RDF triples, using Apache Jena RIOT." assertion.
- assertion comment "The CARML library can output a stream of RDF quad statements, using RDF4J Rio." assertion.
- kigam-gesciences-test comment "KIGAM is the Korean Geosciences Institute" assertion.
- assertion comment "The VoCaLS vocabulary defines an RDF stream as a potentially infinite sequence of RDF graphs and/or triples." assertion.
- assertion comment "RSP4J's YASPER implementation has the RDFStream class which can consume streams of either RDF graphs or RDF triples. The implementation technically consumes only RDF graphs, but the authors appear to assume that an RDF graph is a generalization of an RDF triple." assertion.
- osf comment "The Open Science framework or (OSF) is an online platform that enables researchers to transparently plan, collect, analyze, and share their work throughout the entire research life cycle. Each tool available on the OSF is specifically designed to promote the integrity of research while supporting researchers' individual comfort levels related to sharing and collaboration." assertion.
- osf-id comment "Each file and object on OSF is identified with a short identifier string. When combined with the root OSF URL, this forms a globally unique identifier for the object." assertion.
- osf-map comment "The OSF metadata application profile (OSF MAP) documents the structure of metadata stored in the OSF. It represents how data is captured for the primary objects of the OSF: Projects, Registrations, and Preprints, as well as the individual files that make up these objects." assertion.
- osf-addons comment "The OSF Addons Service allows authorizing external storage services for use on OSF and connecting authorized storage to OSF objects for use by that object's contributors." assertion.
- osf-mpp comment "COS established a $400,000 preservation fund for hosted data in the event that COS had to curtail or close its offices. If activated, the preservation fund will preserve and maintain read access to hosted data. This fund is sufficient for 50+ years of read access hosting at present costs. COS will incorporate growth of the preservation fund as part of its funding model as data storage scales." assertion.
- ORCID-AAI comment "ORCID is an open, non-profit, community-driven effort to create and maintain a registry of unique researcher identifiers and a transparent method of linking research activities and outputs to these identifiers. The ORCID Registry is a repository of unique researcher identifiers which allows researchers to manage a record of their research activities. In addition, there are APIs that support system-to-system communication and authentication." assertion.
- FAIRsharing.dj8nt8 comment "The European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) is a globally comprehensive data resource for nucleotide sequence, spanning raw data, alignments and assemblies, functional and taxonomic annotation and rich contextual data relating to sequenced samples and experimental design. Serving both as the database of record for the output of the world's sequencing activity and as a platform for the management, sharing and publication of sequence data, the ENA provides a portfolio of services for submission, data management, search and retrieval across web and programmatic interfaces. The ENA is part of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC), which comprises the DNA DataBank of Japan (DDBJ), the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), and GenBank at the NCBI. These three organizations exchange data on a daily basis." assertion.
- FAIRsharing.dj8nt8 comment "The European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) is a globally comprehensive data resource for nucleotide sequence, spanning raw data, alignments and assemblies, functional and taxonomic annotation and rich contextual data relating to sequenced samples and experimental design. Serving both as the database of record for the output of the world's sequencing activity and as a platform for the management, sharing and publication of sequence data, the ENA provides a portfolio of services for submission, data management, search and retrieval across web and programmatic interfaces. The ENA is part of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC), which comprises the DNA DataBank of Japan (DDBJ), the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), and GenBank at the NCBI. These three organizations exchange data on a daily basis." assertion.
- FAIR-principle-for-environmental-data comment "Big Data Group at Poli-USP" assertion.
- FAIRsharing.123197 comment "The OpenAIRE Guidelines for Data Archive provides instruction for data archive managers to expose their metadata in a way that is compatible with the OpenAIRE infrastructure. The metadata from data archives should be included in the OpenAIRE information space, and exposed when data are related to an open access publication e.g. a dataset cited by an article." assertion.
- FAIRsharing.3epmpp comment "Mendeley Data is a multidisciplinary, free-to-use open repository specialised for research data. Files of any format can be uploaded and shared with the research community following the FAIR data principles, up to a maximum of 10GB per dataset. Each version of a dataset is given a unique DOI, and dark archived with DANS (Data Archiving and Networking Services), ensuring that every dataset and citation will be valid in perpetuity. Datasets can be licensed under a range of open licences, and datasets are and will continue to be free access. Mendeley Data supports embargoing of data both generally and while undergoing peer review. It is funded by a subscription model for Academic & Government entities." assertion.
- FAIRsharing.3mtaee comment "Open Archives Initiative develops and promotes interoperability standards that aim to facilitate the efficient dissemination of content; OAI has its roots in the open access and institutional repository movements. The OAI-ORE is a standard for the description and exchange of compound digital objects (e.g. distributed resources with multiple media types including text, images, data, and video), to expose the rich content in these aggregations to applications that support authoring, deposit, exchange, visualization, reuse, and preservation. The intent of the effort is to develop standards that generalize across all web-based information including the increasing popular social networks of “web 2.0”." assertion.
- assertion comment "testing..." assertion.
- ADVANCE comment "Within the scope of the Helmholtz Metadata Collaboration, the ADVANCE project aims at supporting rich metadata generation with interoperable metadata standards and semantic artefacts that facilitate data access, integration and reuse across terrestrial, freshwater and marine realms." assertion.
- assertion comment "The paper describes a mechanism for creating live open scientific knowledge graphs. Figure 2 illustrates the concept, with the "Live Posts Stream" appearing to be a stream of RDF graphs. This is not explicitly stated in the text, though." assertion.
- ADVANCE_schema comment "ADVANCE metadata schema was built within the scope of the Helmholtz Metadata Collaboration to describe biodiversity monitoring data across marine, terrestrial ans freshwater European ecosystems" assertion.
- LifeWatchITA comment "LifeWatch Italy is the Italian node of the European Research Infrastructure Consortium LifeWatch ERIC, the distributed e-Science Infrastructure on biodiversity and ecosystem research." assertion.
- LifeWatchITAdataPortal comment "The LifeWatch Italy Data Portal is a national data infrastructure facilitating data sharing for biological and environmental research and making it accessible and reusable." assertion.
- NP_onto comment "The Nanopuplication Ontology defines the structure of a nanopublication including the predicates how the data (the nanopublication itself) and the metadata is linked to each other. A nanopublication consists of an assertion, the provenance of the assertion (simply called "provenance"), and the provenance of the whole nanopublication (called "publication info"). Nanopublications are implemented and aligned with Semantic Web technologies, such as RDF, OWL, and SPARQL." assertion.
- NP_onto comment "The Nanopuplication Ontology defines the structure of a nanopublication including the predicates how the data (the nanopublication itself) and the metadata is linked to each other. A nanopublication consists of an assertion, the provenance of the assertion (simply called "provenance"), and the provenance of the whole nanopublication (called "publication info"). Nanopublications are implemented and aligned with Semantic Web technologies, such as RDF, OWL, and SPARQL." assertion.
- MOD comment "MOD is conceived as an OWL ontology and application profile to capture metadata information for ontologies, vocabularies or semantic resources/artefacts in general. MOD 2.0 is designed as a profile of DCAT 2." assertion.
- MOD comment "MOD is conceived as an OWL ontology and application profile to capture metadata information for ontologies, vocabularies or semantic resources/artefacts in general. MOD 2.0 is designed as a profile of DCAT 2." assertion.
- assertion comment "Current chatbots can pass the Turing Test, right? A lot of people have claimed this, but Cameron Jones ( @camrobjones ) and Benjamin Bergen of UCSD actually tested the claim! (Spoiler: The answer is "no, they don't pass.")" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- association comment "The association was established by the amplicon metagenomic analysis of the gut content of the beetles, which revealed DNA of the object taxon" assertion.
- DestinE comment "The Destination Earth initiative actively involves users and community members in the co-design, development and use of Destination Earth. By joining the DestinE community, members will receive regular newsletters, summarising the latest progress and updates on the project as well as information on upcoming events, procurement opportunities, and much more. " assertion.
- CEDAR_user_account comment "The Center for Expanded Data Annotation and Retrieval (CEDAR) Workbench is a database of metadata templates that define the data elements needed to describe particular types of biomedical experiments. The templates include controlled terms and synonyms for specific data elements. CEDAR is an end-to-end process that enables community-based organizations to collaborate to create metadata templates, investigators or curators to use the templates to define the metadata for individual experiments, and scientists to search the metadata to access and analyze the corresponding online datasets. It requires an user account to mediate access to the templates." assertion.
- assertion comment "Whole genome sequence with annotations also available in GigaDB: http://dx.doi.org/10.5524/102476" assertion.
- CEDAR_user_account comment "This is the authentication and authorization service for the Center for Expanded Data Annotation and Retrieval (CEDAR) Workbench." assertion.
- CEDAR_user_account comment "This is the authentication and authorization service for the Center for Expanded Data Annotation and Retrieval (CEDAR) Workbench." assertion.
- SA comment "Semantic artefacts are machine-actionable formalisations of concepts such as controlled vocabularies, thesauri, and ontologies which facilitate the extraction and representation of knowledge within data sets using annotations or assertions, and enabling sharing and reuse by humans and machines. " assertion.
- UMLS comment "The UMLS, or Unified Medical Language System, is a set of files and softwares that brings together many health and biomedical vocabularies and standards to enable interoperability between computer systems." assertion.
- OBO comment "The Open Biological and Biomedical Ontologies (OBO; formerly Open Biomedical Ontologies) is an effort to create ontologies (controlled vocabularies) for use across biological and medical domains. The OBO file format is a biology-oriented language for building ontologies. It is based on the principles of Web Ontology Language (OWL). A subset of the original OBO ontologies has started the OBO Foundry, which leads the OBO efforts since 2007." assertion.
- REST comment "A REST API (also known as RESTful API) is an application programming interface (API) that conforms to the constraints of REST architectural style and allows for interaction with RESTful web services. REST stands for representational state transfer." assertion.
- OntoPortal comment "OntoPortal is a open-source technology to build ontology repositories or semantic artefact catalogues. " assertion.
- OntologyMetrics comment "BioPortal calculates metrics when the ontology is uploaded and will store them as part of the Ontology Metadata. There are two groups of metrics: 1. statistical metrics and 2. quality-control and quality-assurance metrics." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- VocBench comment "VocBench is a web-based, multilingual, collaborative development platform for managing OWL ontologies, SKOS(/XL) thesauri, Ontolex-lemon lexicons and generic RDF datasets." assertion.
- assertion comment "It's very nice to see a nanopublication for this manuscript. The assertion makes sense, except for the subclass statement. It doesn't seem accurate to me to state that this indicator is a kind of concept drift. It seems to be an indicator for the phenomenon of concept drift, but the indicators themselves are different from the phenomena they describe. Therefore, I'd suggest to mark it as a subclass of something like "Indicator"." assertion.
- assertion comment "On top of my previous message about the choice of the subclass, it could be considered to make it an instance of such a class instead of a subclass. Is the term "Unstable Population Indicator" supposed to stand for a whole set of individual things (then it should be a class) or just a single (conceptual) entity (then it should be an instance as a member of a class like "Indicator")." assertion.
- EML2.2.0 comment "WML 2.2.0 introduces support for semantic annotations." assertion.
- EML2.2.0 comment "EML 2.2.0 introduces support for semantic annotations." assertion.
- DataONE comment "DataONE is an open community network providing access to FAIR data through enhanced search and discovery of data from myriad disciplines, including Earth and environmental data. DataONE’s Hosted Repository service provides general repository hosting with advanced metadata submission tools, and built entirely on open software and open standards. Hosted repositories become part of the DataONE network, enabling cross-repository services such as shared data portals that span repositories. The DataONE data management platform supports the full data lifecycle, including use of standard identifiers for data, people, and organizations, and advanced metadata assessment tools to promote FAIR data." assertion.
- DataONE comment "DataONE is an open community network providing access to FAIR data through enhanced search and discovery of data from myriad disciplines, including Earth and environmental data. DataONE’s Hosted Repository service provides general repository hosting with advanced metadata submission tools, and built entirely on open software and open standards. Hosted repositories become part of the DataONE network, enabling cross-repository services such as shared data portals that span repositories. The DataONE data management platform supports the full data lifecycle, including use of standard identifiers for data, people, and organizations, and advanced metadata assessment tools to promote FAIR data." assertion.
- DEIMS-ID comment "The DEIMS.ID is a persistent identifier issued by DEIMS-SDR (https://deims.org) to unumbiguously identify long-term observation facilities. A DEIMS.ID is an identifier for your registered site. It is (a) unique, (b) resolvable, and (c) persistent. The DEIMS.ID is issued only once for a site. It never changes and is designed to last for years. It is therefore suited to be used in papers, project reports or websites." assertion.
- DwC comment "Darwin Core (DwC) is a vocabulary that includes a glossary of terms (in other contexts these might be called properties, elements, fields, columns, attributes, or concepts) intended to facilitate the sharing of information about biological diversity by providing identifiers, labels, and definitions. The Darwin Core is primarily based on the observation, specimen and samples of taxa. The Darwin Core standard is comprised of one vocabulary (the Darwin Core vocabulary), and six associated documents. The vocabulary itself is composed of four term lists: Darwin Core terms borrowed from the Dublin Core legacy and terms namespace, Darwin Core IRI-value Term Analogs, and the core terms defined by Darwin Core." assertion.
- DwC comment "Darwin Core (DwC) is a vocabulary that includes a glossary of terms (in other contexts these might be called properties, elements, fields, columns, attributes, or concepts) intended to facilitate the sharing of information about biological diversity by providing identifiers, labels, and definitions. The Darwin Core is primarily based on the observation, specimen and samples of taxa. The Darwin Core standard is comprised of one vocabulary (the Darwin Core vocabulary), and six associated documents. The vocabulary itself is composed of four term lists: Darwin Core terms borrowed from the Dublin Core legacy and terms namespace, Darwin Core IRI-value Term Analogs, and the core terms defined by Darwin Core." assertion.
- DEIMS-SDR_SMM comment "Metadata model to describe long term observation facilities focusing on the geographic characteristics, observation focus as well as the instrumentation." assertion.
- MARCXML comment "The MARC formats are standards for the representation and communication of bibliographic and related information in machine-readable form. MARCXML is an XML encoding of the MARC 21 format." assertion.
- MODS comment "Metadata Object Description Schema (MODS) is a schema for a bibliographic element set that may be used for a variety of purposes, and particularly for library applications. As an XML schema it is intended to be able to carry selected data from existing MARC 21 records as well as to enable the creation of original resource description records. MODS is intended to complement other metadata formats. For some applications, particularly those that have used MARC records, there will be advantages over other metadata schemes. Some advantages are: the element set is richer than Dublin Core; the element set is more compatible with library data than ONIX; the schema is more end user oriented than the full MARCXML schema; the element set is simpler than the full MARC format. Please note that round-tripping between MARC 21 and MODS is not guaranteed." assertion.
- MODS comment "Metadata Object Description Schema (MODS) is a schema for a bibliographic element set that may be used for a variety of purposes, and particularly for library applications. As an XML schema it is intended to be able to carry selected data from existing MARC 21 records as well as to enable the creation of original resource description records. MODS is intended to complement other metadata formats. For some applications, particularly those that have used MARC records, there will be advantages over other metadata schemes. Some advantages are: the element set is richer than Dublin Core; the element set is more compatible with library data than ONIX; the schema is more end user oriented than the full MARCXML schema; the element set is simpler than the full MARC format. Please note that round-tripping between MARC 21 and MODS is not guaranteed." assertion.
- DRI comment "The Digital Repository of Ireland is a trusted national infrastructure for the preservation, curation, and dissemination of Ireland’s humanities, social sciences, and cultural heritage data. DRI operates on a membership model, providing stewardship of digital data from a range of member organisations including higher education institutions, cultural heritage institutions (the GLAM sector of galleries, libraries, archives, and museums), government agencies, and county councils. DRI also offers some free DRI Memberships and related benefits to organisations that operate on a non-funded basis as part of the DRI Community Archive Scheme. " assertion.
- DRI comment "The Digital Repository of Ireland is a trusted national infrastructure for the preservation, curation, and dissemination of Ireland’s humanities, social sciences, and cultural heritage data. DRI operates on a membership model, providing stewardship of digital data from a range of member organisations including higher education institutions, cultural heritage institutions (the GLAM sector of galleries, libraries, archives, and museums), government agencies, and county councils. DRI also offers some free DRI Memberships and related benefits to organisations that operate on a non-funded basis as part of the DRI Community Archive Scheme. " assertion.
- TDWG comment "Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG), also known as the Taxonomic Databases Working Group, is a is a not-for-profit, scientific and educational association formed to establish international collaboration among the creators, managers and users of biodiversity information and to promote the wider and more effective dissemination and sharing of knowledge about the world's heritage of biological organisms. It is affiliated with the International Union of Biological Sciences. TDWG was formed to establish international collaboration among biological database projects. TDWG promoted the wider and more effective dissemination of information about the World's heritage of biological organisms for the benefit of the world at large. Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) now focuses on the development of standards for the exchange of biological/biodiversity data. The TDWG develops, adopts and promotes standards and guidelines for the recording and exchange of data about organisms. Additionally, it promotes the use of standards through the most appropriate and effective means. The TDWG acts as a forum for discussion through holding meetings and through publications. Logo covered under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License." assertion.