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e-science and the semantic web: A symbiotic relationship

e-science and the semantic web: A symbiotic relationship
e-science and the semantic web: A symbiotic relationship
e-Science is scientific investigation performed through distributed global collaborations between scientists and their resources, and the computing infrastructure that enables this. Scientific progress increasingly depends on pooling know-how and results; making connections between ideas, people, and data; and finding and reusing knowledge and resources generated by others in perhaps unintended ways. It is about harvesting and harnessing the “collective intelligence” of the scientific community. The Semantic Web is an extension of the current Web in which information is given well-defined meaning to facilitate sharing and reuse, better enabling computers and people to work in cooperation. Applying the Semantic Web paradigm to e-Science has the potential to bring significant benefits to scientific discovery. We identify the benefits of lightweight and heavyweight approaches, based on our experiences in the Life Sciences.
1-12
Goble, Carole
8c248c0f-f19e-4dda-838b-77a89c5d3d38
Corcho, Oscar
f5a436c8-9c9e-4e97-af05-aebf39bb7e5d
Alper, Pinar
df993ccf-5d3d-40c0-acb0-8c33ab5cb79d
De Roure, David
02879140-3508-4db9-a7f4-d114421375da
Goble, Carole
8c248c0f-f19e-4dda-838b-77a89c5d3d38
Corcho, Oscar
f5a436c8-9c9e-4e97-af05-aebf39bb7e5d
Alper, Pinar
df993ccf-5d3d-40c0-acb0-8c33ab5cb79d
De Roure, David
02879140-3508-4db9-a7f4-d114421375da

Goble, Carole, Corcho, Oscar, Alper, Pinar and De Roure, David (2006) e-science and the semantic web: A symbiotic relationship. Discovery Science 2006, Barcelona, Spain. pp. 1-12 .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

e-Science is scientific investigation performed through distributed global collaborations between scientists and their resources, and the computing infrastructure that enables this. Scientific progress increasingly depends on pooling know-how and results; making connections between ideas, people, and data; and finding and reusing knowledge and resources generated by others in perhaps unintended ways. It is about harvesting and harnessing the “collective intelligence” of the scientific community. The Semantic Web is an extension of the current Web in which information is given well-defined meaning to facilitate sharing and reuse, better enabling computers and people to work in cooperation. Applying the Semantic Web paradigm to e-Science has the potential to bring significant benefits to scientific discovery. We identify the benefits of lightweight and heavyweight approaches, based on our experiences in the Life Sciences.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Venue - Dates: Discovery Science 2006, Barcelona, Spain, 2006-01-01
Organisations: Electronics & Computer Science

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 263624
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/263624
PURE UUID: 639717d2-f279-4b16-9c57-4cd4481d4763
ORCID for David De Roure: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9074-3016

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Feb 2007
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 07:35

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Contributors

Author: Carole Goble
Author: Oscar Corcho
Author: Pinar Alper
Author: David De Roure ORCID iD

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