• Medientyp: Elektronische Hochschulschrift; Dissertation; E-Book
  • Titel: Semantics for the Web of Things: Modeling the Physical World as a Collection of Things and Reasoning with their Descriptions
  • Beteiligte: Charpenay, Victor [VerfasserIn]
  • Erschienen: Passau University: OPUS, 2019-11-28
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Schlagwörter: Semantic Web ; Internet der Dinge
  • Entstehung:
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  • Beschreibung: The main research question of this thesis is to develop a theory that would provide foundations for the development of Web of Things (WoT) systems. A theory for WoT shall provide a model of the ‘things’ WoT agents relate to such that these relations determine what interactions take place between these agents. This thesis presents a knowledge-based approach in which the semantics of WoT systems is given by a transformation (an homomorphism) between a graph representing agent interactions and a knowledge graph describing ‘things’. It focuses on three aspects of knowledge graphs in particular: the vocabulary with which assertions can be made, the rules that can be defined over this vocabulary and its serialization to efficiently exchange pieces of a knowledge graph. Each aspect is developed in a dedicated chapter, with specific contributions to the state-of-the-art. The need for a unified vocabulary to describe ‘things’ in WoT and the Internet of Things (IoT) has been identified early on in the literature. Many proposals have been consequently published, in the form of Web ontologies. In Ch. 2, a systematic review of these proposals is being developed, as well as a comparison with the data models of the principal IoT frameworks and protocols. The contribution of the thesis in that respect is an alignment between the Thing Description (TD) model and the Semantic Sensor Network (SSN) ontology, two standards of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). The scope of this thesis is generally limited to Web standards, especially those defined by the Resource Description framework (RDF). Web ontologies do not only expose a vocabulary but also rules to extend a knowledge graph by means of reasoning. Starting from a set of TD documents, new relations between ‘things’ can be “discovered” this way, indicating possible interactions between the servients that relate to them. The experiments presented in Ch. 3 were done on the basis of this semantic discovery framework on two use cases: a building automation use case provided by ...
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