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[Gzz-commits] manuscripts/FutureVision oplan.txt


From: Benja Fallenstein
Subject: [Gzz-commits] manuscripts/FutureVision oplan.txt
Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2003 10:44:48 -0500

CVSROOT:        /cvsroot/gzz
Module name:    manuscripts
Branch:         
Changes by:     Benja Fallenstein <address@hidden>      03/11/13 10:44:48

Modified files:
        FutureVision   : oplan.txt 

Log message:
        address recontextualization

CVSWeb URLs:
http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/gzz/manuscripts/FutureVision/oplan.txt.diff?tr1=1.15&tr2=1.16&r1=text&r2=text

Patches:
Index: manuscripts/FutureVision/oplan.txt
diff -u manuscripts/FutureVision/oplan.txt:1.15 
manuscripts/FutureVision/oplan.txt:1.16
--- manuscripts/FutureVision/oplan.txt:1.15     Thu Nov 13 10:33:33 2003
+++ manuscripts/FutureVision/oplan.txt  Thu Nov 13 10:44:47 2003
@@ -202,18 +202,6 @@
 the definition of hyperstructure above, then discuss it
 in light of the "connotations" of hyperstructure.
 
-    .. The RDF structure (`Lassila and Swick 1999`_) is a graph containing
-       three types of nodes: Nodes identified globally by a URI,
-       "blank" nodes with identifiers local to a graph, and
-       *literals* (explicit values such as strings and numbers).
-       An RDF graph is a set of triples containing a *subject*,
-       *predicate* and *object* nodes (literals can only occur
-       as objects), which are interpreted as edges in the graph;
-       the subject and object are vertices, the predicate
-       is a label.
-
-    
-
     Our work is based on using the Resource Description Framework
     (RDF, `Lassila and Swick 1999`_) as a hyperstructure.
     In the examples we have given above, we have assumed the use of RDF.
@@ -235,6 +223,20 @@
     to the same item by using different properties. Properties
     are the RDF equivalent to zzstructure's dimensions.
 
+    RDF triples are not associated with a context.
+    For example, one cannot create two triples saying that
+    "Paper A supports paper B" and "Paper A contradicts paper B,"
+    and then say that the first triple is true under one set
+    of assertions and the second under another set. 
+
+    To represent this information in RDF, one would not 
+    use a direct connection between the papers; rather,
+    one would create new nodes for both statements,
+    and connect them to the two papers as well as to the
+    sets of assetions under which either statement is true.
+    (This is how statements about more than two nodes
+    are generally represented in RDF.)
+
     Visualizations of RDF... [keep current paragraphs here]
     ...herculean task.
 
@@ -562,3 +564,10 @@
 -----------------------------------------
 
 
+Acknowledgements
+================
+
+Mention all people that have been in the group,
+i.e. also Katariina Ervasti, Rauli Ruohonen, Kimmo Wideroos.
+
+Thank anonymous referees.
\ No newline at end of file




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