Using the Semantic Web to Integrate Ecoinformatics Resources
Abstract
We demonstrate an end-to-end use case of the semantic web’s utility for synthesizing ecological and environmental data. ELVIS (the Ecosystem Location Visualization and Information System) is a suite of tools for constructing food webs for a given location. ELVIS functionality is exposed as a collection of web services, and all input and output data is expressed in OWL, thereby enabling its integration with other semantic web resources. In particular, we describe using a Triple Shop application to answer SPARQL queries from a collection of semantic web documents.
Cite
Text
Parr et al. "Using the Semantic Web to Integrate Ecoinformatics Resources." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2006. doi:10.13016/m2td9nc6bMarkdown
[Parr et al. "Using the Semantic Web to Integrate Ecoinformatics Resources." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2006.](https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2006/parr2006aaai-using/) doi:10.13016/m2td9nc6bBibTeX
@inproceedings{parr2006aaai-using,
title = {{Using the Semantic Web to Integrate Ecoinformatics Resources}},
author = {Parr, Cynthia Sims and Parafiynyk, Andriy and Sachs, Joel and Pan, Rong and Han, Lushan and Ding, Li and Finin, Tim and Wang, David},
booktitle = {AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
year = {2006},
pages = {1949-1950},
doi = {10.13016/m2td9nc6b},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2006/parr2006aaai-using/}
}