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  • © 2013

Semantic Mashups

Intelligent Reuse of Web Resources

  • Combines theoretical underpinnings with various sample implementations in different application domains

  • Presents sample implementations from areas like travel, crisis management, speech processing, mathematics, and more

  • Includes descriptions of underlying standards and resources like DBpedia and the Web of Things

  • Written by selected participants at the annual AI Mashup Challenge

  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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Table of contents (11 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages I-VII
  2. The Mashup Ecosystem

    • Brigitte Endres-Niggemeyer
    Pages 1-50
  3. Mashups Live on Standards

    • Brigitte Endres-Niggemeyer
    Pages 51-89
  4. Mashups for Web Search Engines

    • Ioannis Papadakis, Ioannis Apostolatos
    Pages 91-117
  5. DBpedia Mashups

    • Mihály Héder, Illés Solt
    Pages 119-143
  6. Mashups for the Web of Things

    • Klemen Kenda, Carolina Fortuna, Alexandra Moraru, Dunja Mladenić, Blaž Fortuna, Marko Grobelnik
    Pages 145-169
  7. Mashups Using Mathematical Knowledge

    • Christoph Lange, Michael Kohlhase
    Pages 171-204
  8. Speech Mashups

    • Giuseppe Di Fabbrizio, Thomas Okken, Jay Wilpon
    Pages 205-235
  9. Mashups for the Emergency Management Domain

    • Axel Schulz, Heiko Paulheim
    Pages 237-260
  10. Similarity Mashups for Recommendation

    • Arturs Sosins, Martins Zviedris
    Pages 261-285
  11. Urban Mashups

    • Daniele Dell’Aglio, Irene Celino, Emanuele Della Valle
    Pages 287-319
  12. Travel Mashups

    • Amparo E. Cano, Aba-Sah Dadzie, Fabio Ciravegna
    Pages 321-347
  13. Back Matter

    Pages 349-382

About this book

Mashups are mostly lightweight Web applications that offer new functionalities by combining, aggregating and transforming resources and services available on the Web. Popular examples include a map in their main offer, for instance for real estate, hotel recommendations, or navigation tools.

 

Mashups may contain and mix client-side and server-side activity. Obviously, understanding the incoming resources (services, statistical figures, text, videos, etc.) is a precondition for optimally combining them, so that there is always some undercover semantics being used.  By using semantic annotations, neutral mashups permute into the branded type of semantic mashups. Further and deeper semantic processing such as reasoning is the next step.

 

The chapters of this book reflect the diversity of real-life semantic mashups. Two overview chapters take the reader to the environments where mashups are at home and review the regulations (standards, guidelines etc.) mashups are based on and confronted with. Chapters focusing on DBpedia, search engines and the Web of Things inspect the main Web surroundings of mashups. While mashups upgrading search queries may be nearer to the everyday experience of readers, mashups using DBpedia input and sensor data from the real world lead to important new and therefore less known developments. Finally, the diversity of mashups is tracked through a few application areas: mathematical knowledge, speech, crisis and disaster management, recommendations (for games), inner-city information, and tourism.

 

Participants of the AI Mashup Challenge wrote all the chapters of this book. The authors were writing for their current and future colleagues – researchers and developers all over the Web who integrate mashup functionalities into their thinking and possibly into their applications.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Hannover, Germany

    Brigitte Endres-Niggemeyer

About the editor

Brigitte Endres-Niggemeyer mainly works in natural language and knowledge processing. Currently she is focusing on IOS development for iPhone and iPad, with specific attention to speech apps. Previously, she did a series of AI-related projects: from an early computerized cataloguing of physics papers (1984 -- 1987) to empirically founded summarization with a cognitive science and qualitative field research background (1989 -- 1998) to web-based knowledge acquisition and presentation for bone marrow transplantation (2000 -- 2006). A highlight in her many years of teaching activities was the development of a German technical writing program (1989 -- 1990). This book is the fruit of the AI Mashup Challenge that she has been running since 2009.

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 39.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as EPUB and PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 59.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
Hardcover Book USD 54.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access