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Courses in summer term 2008 / XML and Semantic Web-Technologies

Time: Mon 10-12 (weekly) /
Wed 10-12 (bi-weekly)
Location: A9 Spl / L031
Start: 14.04.2008
Tutorial: Mon 16-18, C213 Spl (starts in the second week)
This lecture will not take place during the summer term. Please read the German version of this page for further information.

The Extensible Markup Language (XML), a W3C standard since 1998, allows the uniform representation of semistructured documents and data, readable for humans as well as for machines. XML is used as universal data and document format throughout all application areas of computer science. While XML describes syntax, the resource description framework (RDF) and the web ontology language (OWL) can code the semantics, i.e., meaning in a formal way, so that it can be processed automatically, e.g., for inferring knowledge from several facts or more generally answering complex queries.

The first part of the lecture covers the actual XML standards (XML, XML-Schema, XPath, XSL and XQuery), the second part gives an introduction to the basic semantic web technologies (RDF, OWL). The focus of the lecture is on practical knowledge about the usage of these technologies and the theoretical concepts behind them.

Introducory readings:

  1. Goldfarb, Charles F., Prescod, Paul (2003): XML Handbook, Prentice Hall PTR, 5th edition.
  2. Katz, Howard (Hrsg., 2004): XQuery from the experts: a guide to the W3C XML query language. Boston : Addison-Wesley.
  3. Fensel, D. (2001): Ontologies: a silver bullet for knowledge management and electronic commerce. Berlin: Springer.
  4. Fensel, D., Hendler, J., Lieberman, H., Wahlster, W. (2003): Introduction to the Semantic Web. In: Spinning the Semantic Web. Bringing the World Wide Web to Its Full Potential. Cambridge: MIT Press, S. 1-25.