Digital Scholarly Editions (DSE) are a powerful tool for disseminating cultural heritage. As long as Semantic Web technologies become a de facto standard for disseminating cultural heritage data, DSE are a missing bit that must be integrated in the LOD Cloud. Despite a number of standards are in place for exchanging data about encoded texts (XML/TEI, noSQL database, RESTful API), a number of key elements are missing, namely: (1) a comprehensive workflow for publishing DSE as knowledge graphs, (2) data models for identifying concepts and relationships characterising DSE, and (3) a cost-benefit analysis of the usage of such technologies. In this paper we present the proof-of-concept DSE of Paolo Bufalini's notebook so as to address, discuss, and evaluate aforementioned issues.Â
%0 Journal Article
%1 UD9091
%A Daquino, Marilena
%A Giovannetti, Francesca
%A Tomasi, Francesca
%D 2019
%J Umanistica Digitale
%K Digital_scholarly_editions Linked_Open_Data Ontologies Semantic_publishing TEI dhjmf
%T Linked Data per le edizioni scientifiche digitali. Il workflow di pubblicazione dellâedizione semantica del quaderno di appunti di Paolo Bufalini
%U https://umanisticadigitale.unibo.it/article/view/9091
%X Digital Scholarly Editions (DSE) are a powerful tool for disseminating cultural heritage. As long as Semantic Web technologies become a de facto standard for disseminating cultural heritage data, DSE are a missing bit that must be integrated in the LOD Cloud. Despite a number of standards are in place for exchanging data about encoded texts (XML/TEI, noSQL database, RESTful API), a number of key elements are missing, namely: (1) a comprehensive workflow for publishing DSE as knowledge graphs, (2) data models for identifying concepts and relationships characterising DSE, and (3) a cost-benefit analysis of the usage of such technologies. In this paper we present the proof-of-concept DSE of Paolo Bufalini's notebook so as to address, discuss, and evaluate aforementioned issues.Â
@article{UD9091,
abstract = {Digital Scholarly Editions (DSE) are a powerful tool for disseminating cultural heritage. As long as Semantic Web technologies become a de facto standard for disseminating cultural heritage data, DSE are a missing bit that must be integrated in the LOD Cloud. Despite a number of standards are in place for exchanging data about encoded texts (XML/TEI, noSQL database, RESTful API), a number of key elements are missing, namely: (1) a comprehensive workflow for publishing DSE as knowledge graphs, (2) data models for identifying concepts and relationships characterising DSE, and (3) a cost-benefit analysis of the usage of such technologies. In this paper we present the proof-of-concept DSE of Paolo Bufalini's notebook so as to address, discuss, and evaluate aforementioned issues. },
added-at = {2020-03-09T19:18:14.000+0100},
author = {Daquino, Marilena and Giovannetti, Francesca and Tomasi, Francesca},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/296c80e0ce7a388a9836b1908207297ea/dhjmf},
interhash = {822411890eb280297efda39115787f3f},
intrahash = {96c80e0ce7a388a9836b1908207297ea},
journal = {Umanistica Digitale},
keywords = {Digital_scholarly_editions Linked_Open_Data Ontologies Semantic_publishing TEI dhjmf},
timestamp = {2020-03-09T19:18:14.000+0100},
title = {Linked Data per le edizioni scientifiche digitali. Il workflow di pubblicazione dellâedizione semantica del quaderno di appunti di Paolo Bufalini},
url = {https://umanisticadigitale.unibo.it/article/view/9091},
year = 2019
}