Re: Publication of scientific research

you could use the annotation ontology for annotations. an example of
semantic publications: http://www.jbiomedsem.com/content/4/S1/S5

On Thu, Apr 25, 2013 at 8:46 PM, Sarven Capadisli <info@csarven.ca> wrote:
> On 04/25/2013 04:57 PM, Andrea Splendiani wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Ok, let's take a practical step.
>> Let's assume we are going to open a call for a workshop and there we ask
>> for "structured information". Which steps do we take and what do we need?
>>
>> If we want to move one step at a time, we would still need a site to
>> handle the submission/review process (you cannot rely on online feedback
>> for accepting/rejecting papers with no bias in a given timeframe).
>> Something like easychair accepts the upload of extra files, so that
>> could be used already off the shelf.
>>
>> Second, we need to specify where and how Redfin should be used. If we
>> are in the sw/ld area, what for? We may ask for Uris for:
>> Citations
>> Authors
>> Tools? Ontologies?
>>
>> What else ?
>>
>> Take for example the papers here:
>>
>> http://www.jbiomedsem.com/series/SWAT4LSCSHALS
>>
>> What would you propose for this kind o research?
>
>
> It could be practically anything that the authors find worthwhile to have an
> URI for discovery. In addition to Kingsley's points, here are mine:
>
> * Problems, hypothesis, contributions, claims, results, conclusions
> * If in the form of a blog post, comments, replies, reviews etc. on the page
> could be invaluable.
> * Licensing
>
> There is also some excellent work done with SPAR (Semantic Publishing and
> Referencing Ontologies) [1], [2].
>
> [1] http://sempublishing.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/sempublishing/SPAR/
> [2]
> http://opencitations.wordpress.com/2010/10/14/introducing-the-semantic-publishing-and-referencing-spar-ontologies/
>
> -Sarven
>
>



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Received on Thursday, 25 April 2013 18:50:52 UTC