توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Linked Open Data for Digital Humanities
نام کتاب : Linked Open Data for Digital Humanities
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : داده های باز مرتبط برای علوم انسانی دیجیتال
سری :
نویسندگان : Terhi Nurmikko-Fuller,
ناشر : Routledge
سال نشر : 2024
تعداد صفحات : 156
ISBN (شابک) : 9781000929799 , 9781003197898
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Preface
Context for This Book
How to Read This Book
Who Should Read This Book
Structure of the Book
Conventions Used in This Book
In Summary
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Bibliography
1 A False Dichotomy
1.1 Preamble
1.2 Interdisciplinarity
1.3 Snow’s Two Cultures
1.4 The Role of Humanities in Computer Science
1.5 Linked Data and the Humanities – A Perfect Pair?
1.5.1 The First Wittgenstein and the RDF Triple
1.5.2 The Second Wittgenstein and Explicit Statement of Facts
1.5.3 Foucault, Semantic Web, and Properties
1.5.4 Meaning Derived From Connections
1.6 Conclusion
Bibliography
2 Privacy, Ethics, and Trust
2.1 Preamble
2.2 The Unavoidable Orwellian Reference
2.3 Privacy as a Right, Not a Privilege
2.4 Privacy Paradox
2.5 Trusting Data Producers, Trusting Data Consumers
2.6 Potential for Disaster
2.7 We Need to Talk About Strava
2.8 On the Questions of Ethics
2.9 Conclusion
Bibliography
3 Closed But Not for Business
3.1 Preamble
3.2 Data
3.2.1 Unreproducible Data
3.2.2 Unstructured Data
3.2.3 Ambiguous Data
3.2.4 Incomplete Data
3.2.5 Messy Data
3.4 Openness
3.4.1 Open Source
3.4.2 Open Access
3.4.3 Open Data
3.4.4 Linked Open Data
3.5 Be FAIR, and CARE
3.6 To Be or Not to Be Open?
3.7 Solutions Combining Accessible and Inaccessible Data
3.8 Case Study: The ElePHãT Project (Bibliographic Metadata)
3.9 Conclusion
Bibliography
4 “Truth” and Bias
4.1 Preamble
4.2 Ontologies
4.3 Bias in Ontologies
4.4 Document Your Design
4.5 Justify Your Choices
4.6 Case Study: Old Babylonian Literature
4.6.1 Choosing the Case Study
4.6.2 Three Ox-Drivers of Adab
4.6.3 Ontological Representation
4.6.3.1 Material Objects in Museums
4.6.3.2 Bibliographical Metadata
4.6.3.3 Narrative Structure
4.7 Conclusion
Bibliography
5 Data Demands
5.1 Preamble
5.2 The More Things Change
5.3 Bias in Tool Recommendations
5.4 Different Demands of Different Technologies
5.6 Case Study: JazzCats
5.6.1 Tabular Data: The Body and Soul Discography
5.6.2 Relational Databases to RDF: Weimar Jazz Database
5.6.3 Ready-Made RDF: Linked Jazz
5.6.4 Querying Across Three Datasets Using SPARQL
5.7 Conclusion
Bibliography
6 Future Directions
6.1 Preamble
6.2 The Non-Linear Approach to Discussing Linked Data in the Digital Humanities
6.3 The Tech-Focused Summary of Linked Data in the Digital Humanities
6.4 Conclusion
Bibliography
Glossary
Index