Provenance

An Introduction to PROV

Nonfiction, Computers, Database Management, Information Storage & Retrievel, Advanced Computing, Artificial Intelligence, General Computing
Cover of the book Provenance by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth, Morgan & Claypool Publishers
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Luc Moreau, Paul Groth ISBN: 9781627052221
Publisher: Morgan & Claypool Publishers Publication: September 1, 2013
Imprint: Morgan & Claypool Publishers Language: English
Author: Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
ISBN: 9781627052221
Publisher: Morgan & Claypool Publishers
Publication: September 1, 2013
Imprint: Morgan & Claypool Publishers
Language: English

The World Wide Web is now deeply intertwined with our lives, and has become a catalyst for a data deluge, making vast amounts of data available online, at a click of a button. With Web 2.0, users are no longer passive consumers, but active publishers and curators of data. Hence, from science to food manufacturing, from data journalism to personal well-being, from social media to art, there is a strong interest in provenance, a description of what influenced an artifact, a data set, a document, a blog, or any resource on the Web and beyond. Provenance is a crucial piece of information that can help a consumer make a judgment as to whether something can be trusted. Provenance is no longer seen as a curiosity in art circles, but it is regarded as pragmatically, ethically, and methodologically crucial for our day-to-day data manipulation and curation activities on the Web. Following the recent publication of the PROV standard for provenance on the Web, which the two authors actively help shape in the Provenance Working Group at the World Wide Web Consortium, this Synthesis lecture is a hands-on introduction to PROV aimed at Web and linked data professionals. By means of recipes, illustrations, a website at www.provbook.org, and tools, it guides practitioners through a variety of issues related to provenance: how to generate provenance, publish it on the Web, make it discoverable, and how to utilize it. Equipped with this knowledge, practictioners will be in a position to develop novel applications that can bring open-ness, trust, and accountability. Table of Contents: Preface / Acknowledgments / Introduction / A Data Journalism Scenario / The PROV Ontology / Provenance Recipes / Validation, Compliance, Quality, Replay / Provenance Management / Conclusion / Bibliography / Authors' Biographies / Index

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The World Wide Web is now deeply intertwined with our lives, and has become a catalyst for a data deluge, making vast amounts of data available online, at a click of a button. With Web 2.0, users are no longer passive consumers, but active publishers and curators of data. Hence, from science to food manufacturing, from data journalism to personal well-being, from social media to art, there is a strong interest in provenance, a description of what influenced an artifact, a data set, a document, a blog, or any resource on the Web and beyond. Provenance is a crucial piece of information that can help a consumer make a judgment as to whether something can be trusted. Provenance is no longer seen as a curiosity in art circles, but it is regarded as pragmatically, ethically, and methodologically crucial for our day-to-day data manipulation and curation activities on the Web. Following the recent publication of the PROV standard for provenance on the Web, which the two authors actively help shape in the Provenance Working Group at the World Wide Web Consortium, this Synthesis lecture is a hands-on introduction to PROV aimed at Web and linked data professionals. By means of recipes, illustrations, a website at www.provbook.org, and tools, it guides practitioners through a variety of issues related to provenance: how to generate provenance, publish it on the Web, make it discoverable, and how to utilize it. Equipped with this knowledge, practictioners will be in a position to develop novel applications that can bring open-ness, trust, and accountability. Table of Contents: Preface / Acknowledgments / Introduction / A Data Journalism Scenario / The PROV Ontology / Provenance Recipes / Validation, Compliance, Quality, Replay / Provenance Management / Conclusion / Bibliography / Authors' Biographies / Index

More books from Morgan & Claypool Publishers

Cover of the book Quantifying Measurement by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book HCI Theory by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book P2P Techniques for Decentralized Applications by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book Detecting the Stochastic Gravitational-Wave Background by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book The VR Book by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book A Framework for Scientific Discovery through Video Games by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book How to Understand Quantum Mechanics by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book Introduction to Secure Outsourcing Computation by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book An Introduction to Quantum Communication Networks by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book Capture and Relaxation in Self-Assembled Semiconductor Quantum Dots by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book General Relativity by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book Unmanned Aircraft Design by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book Ionization and Ion Transport by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book Advanced Circuit Simulation using Multisim Workbench by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
Cover of the book Infinite-Space Dyadic Green Functions in Electromagnetism by Luc Moreau, Paul Groth
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy