Journal on Data Semantics I [electronic resource] / edited by Stefano Spaccapietra, Sal March, Karl Aberer.
Material type:
TextSeries: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 2800Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2003Description: XVI, 240 p. online resourceContent type: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783540397335
- Computer science
- Computer Communication Networks
- Database management
- Information storage and retrieval systems
- Information systems
- Artificial intelligence
- Management information systems
- Computer Science
- Database Management
- Computer Communication Networks
- Information Storage and Retrieval
- Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet)
- Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics)
- Business Information Systems
- 005.74 23
- QA76.9.D3
E-BOOKS
| Home library | Call number | Materials specified | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IMSc Library | Link to resource | Available | EBK4703 |
Formal Reasoning Techniques for Goal Models -- Attribute-Based Semantic Reconciliation of Multiple Data Sources -- Data Quality in Web Information Systems -- Reasoning about Anonymous Resources and Meta Statements on the Semantic Web -- IF-Map: An Ontology-Mapping Method Based on Information-Flow Theory -- OntoEdit: Multifaceted Inferencing for Ontology Engineering -- Distributed Description Logics: Assimilating Information from Peer Sources -- On Using Conceptual Data Modeling for Ontology Engineering -- The DaQuinCIS Broker: Querying Data and Their Quality in Cooperative Information Systems.
This book constitutes the ?rst volume of the ?rst journal in the new LNCS Jo- nalSubline,theJournalonDataSemantics. Publishingajournalinabookseries might come as a surprise to customers, readers, and librarians, thus we would like to provide some background information and our motivation for introducing this new LNCS subline. As a consequence of the very tight interaction between the Lecture Notes in ComputerScienceseriesandtheinternationalcomputerscienceresearchand- velopment community, we receive quite a few proposals for new archive journals. From the successful launch of workshops or conferences and publication of their proceedings in the LNCS series, it might seem like a natural step to approach the publisher about launching a journal once this speci?c ?eld has gained a c- tain level of maturity and stability. Each year we receive about a dozen such proposals and even more informal inquiries. Like other publishers, it has been our experience that launching a new jo- nal and making it a long-term success is a hard job nowadays, due to a generally di?cult market situation, and library budget restrictions in particular. Because many of the proceedings in LNCS, and especially many of the LNCS postp- ceedings, apply the same strict reviewing and selection criteria as established journals, we started discussing with proposers of new journals the alternative of devoting a few volumes in LNCS to their ?eld, instead of going through the painful Sisyphean adventure of establishing a new journal on its own.
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