Challenges and opportunities from real world archaeological datasets in the community-driven LOD ecosystem Florian Thiery, Dr. Allard W. Mees, Dr. David G. Wigg-Wolf Introduction Building sustainable research communities around archaeological research subjects requires domain-specific common standards. By linking data to other communities using Linked Open Data (LOD) and so-called Community Hubs, reciprocal community development can take place. In order to attain such research community dynamics, data must be semantically modelled following the FAIR principles (e.g. using CIDOC CRM) and be part of the LOD ecosystem. This leads to the research question as to which methods can be used to enrich and/or contextualise data with community work...
The relevance of LOD and the Semantic Web in archaeology has increased substantially, resulting in t...
In the current trend for e-Science, i.e. collaborative, computationally- or data-intensive research,...
In contemporary archaeological practice, archaeological data suffers from three main conditions: 1. ...
Panel: From wiki projects to OpenStreetMap, collaborative approaches to open data creation: problems...
In historical maps, the phrase “Hic sunt dracones” (here be dragons) is used to describe areas which...
Today, many archaeological data is usually stored in relational databases. One of the advantages of ...
Florian Thiery, Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, Department of Scientific IT, Mainz, Germany Bri...
Research in samian ware advanced considerably in recent years based on a dataset collected by severa...
Abstract for the talk given at the Digital Archaeology Bern 2023 conference, 01st February 2023: Wi...
<p>The Linked Data Cloud is full of controlled resources, which in fact quickly run out of control. ...
The Semantic Web initiative has faced accusations that difficulties associated with its adoption can...
In this paper, we introduce Linked Open Data (LOD) in the archaeological domain as a means to connec...
<p>The inability of journals and books to accommodate data and to make it reusable has led to the gr...
It is likely that the application of LOD approaches to the Humanities will result in large, rich, he...
Strategies for graph-based knowledge modelling as Linked Open Data (LOD) of real world archaeologica...
The relevance of LOD and the Semantic Web in archaeology has increased substantially, resulting in t...
In the current trend for e-Science, i.e. collaborative, computationally- or data-intensive research,...
In contemporary archaeological practice, archaeological data suffers from three main conditions: 1. ...
Panel: From wiki projects to OpenStreetMap, collaborative approaches to open data creation: problems...
In historical maps, the phrase “Hic sunt dracones” (here be dragons) is used to describe areas which...
Today, many archaeological data is usually stored in relational databases. One of the advantages of ...
Florian Thiery, Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, Department of Scientific IT, Mainz, Germany Bri...
Research in samian ware advanced considerably in recent years based on a dataset collected by severa...
Abstract for the talk given at the Digital Archaeology Bern 2023 conference, 01st February 2023: Wi...
<p>The Linked Data Cloud is full of controlled resources, which in fact quickly run out of control. ...
The Semantic Web initiative has faced accusations that difficulties associated with its adoption can...
In this paper, we introduce Linked Open Data (LOD) in the archaeological domain as a means to connec...
<p>The inability of journals and books to accommodate data and to make it reusable has led to the gr...
It is likely that the application of LOD approaches to the Humanities will result in large, rich, he...
Strategies for graph-based knowledge modelling as Linked Open Data (LOD) of real world archaeologica...
The relevance of LOD and the Semantic Web in archaeology has increased substantially, resulting in t...
In the current trend for e-Science, i.e. collaborative, computationally- or data-intensive research,...
In contemporary archaeological practice, archaeological data suffers from three main conditions: 1. ...