On 02/05/2012 05:14 PM, Dan Bolser wrote:
> On 3 February 2012 19:48, emijrp<[email protected]> wrote:
I have to look at the Semantic MediaWiki features for export/import data. I
know that there are some RDF options, but I have not tested yet.
I've been researching it for a different project, and I've written it
up what I have done so far here:
http://bioblog5000.blogspot.com/2012/02/seqwiki-integration-with-neuolex.html
The blog post doesn't show for me.
Talking of data sharing, do you both use the same (standard?) data
model for describing publications? i.e. using the Dublin core
ontology? (Sorry for not going to check that, I figure just ask ;-)
Following the parameters in this
link http://www.cs.umd.edu/projects/plus/SHOE/onts/dublin.html , this is the
WikiPapers model:
TITLE -> title
CREATOR -> author
SUBJECT -> keywords
DESCRIPTION -> abstract
PUBLISHER -> published in
CONTRIBUTOR -> ?
DATE -> year
TYPE -> type
FORMAT -> ?
IDENTIFIER -> doi, arXiv, PubMed, isbn, issn
SOURCE -> ?
LANGUAGE -> language
RELATION -> ?
COVERAGE -> ?
RIGHTS -> license
format and relation have not been formally defined by Dublin. I'm not sure
what info adds 'contributor' to 'creator', 'source' to 'publisher' and
'coverage' to 'abstract/keywords'.
I think I have never really understood the use of Dublin Core. To me it
seems that it does not map well with the usual academic references in
Bibtex, cite journal of Wikipedia, .... You need journal, volume, issue,
paper for journal papers and editor, booktitle for conference papers.
You can see my (partial?) mapping to Dublin core on:
http://neuro.imm.dtu.dk/wiki/Template:Paper
Cheers
Finn
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