Although research on integrating semantics with the Web started almost as soon as the Web was in place, a concrete Semantic Web that is, a large-scale collection of distributed semantic metadata emerged only over the past four to five years. The Semantic Web's embryonic nature is reflected in its existing applications. Most of these applications tend to produce and consume their own data, much like traditional knowledge- based applications, rather than actually exploiting the Semantic Web as a large-scale information source. These first-generation semantic Web applications typically use a single ontology that supports integration of resources selected at design time.
%0 Journal Article
%1 aquin2008
%A D'aquin, M.
%A Motta, E.
%A Sabou, M.
%A Angeletou, S.
%A Gridinoc, L.
%A Lopez, V.
%A Guidi, D.
%B Intelligent Systems, IEEE
%D 2008
%J Intelligent Systems, IEEE
%K browser, diplomarbeit, semantic
%N 3
%P 20--28
%R 10.1109/MIS.2008.54
%T Toward a New Generation of Semantic Web Applications
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/MIS.2008.54
%V 23
%X Although research on integrating semantics with the Web started almost as soon as the Web was in place, a concrete Semantic Web that is, a large-scale collection of distributed semantic metadata emerged only over the past four to five years. The Semantic Web's embryonic nature is reflected in its existing applications. Most of these applications tend to produce and consume their own data, much like traditional knowledge- based applications, rather than actually exploiting the Semantic Web as a large-scale information source. These first-generation semantic Web applications typically use a single ontology that supports integration of resources selected at design time.
@article{aquin2008,
abstract = {Although research on integrating semantics with the Web started almost as soon as the Web was in place, a concrete Semantic Web that is, a large-scale collection of distributed semantic metadata emerged only over the past four to five years. The Semantic Web's embryonic nature is reflected in its existing applications. Most of these applications tend to produce and consume their own data, much like traditional knowledge- based applications, rather than actually exploiting the Semantic Web as a large-scale information source. These first-generation semantic Web applications typically use a single ontology that supports integration of resources selected at design time.},
added-at = {2009-10-23T10:49:34.000+0200},
author = {D'aquin, M. and Motta, E. and Sabou, M. and Angeletou, S. and Gridinoc, L. and Lopez, V. and Guidi, D.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/20a59cd7bfc79101a494b0c0cedd19153/gerhard.wohlgenannt},
booktitle = {Intelligent Systems, IEEE},
citeulike-article-id = {3734634},
description = {phd thesis version 2009-10-23},
doi = {10.1109/MIS.2008.54},
interhash = {695c8c44ccd6486092d0c4fe2e816003},
intrahash = {0a59cd7bfc79101a494b0c0cedd19153},
journal = {Intelligent Systems, IEEE},
keywords = {browser, diplomarbeit, semantic},
number = 3,
pages = {20--28},
posted-at = {2008-12-02 10:16:59},
priority = {2},
timestamp = {2009-10-23T10:49:35.000+0200},
title = {Toward a New Generation of Semantic Web Applications},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/MIS.2008.54},
volume = 23,
year = 2008
}