Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital Humanities
Research in the digital humanities often involves vague information, either because our objects of study lack clearly defined boundaries, or because our knowledge about them is incomplete or hypothetical, which is especially true in disciplines about our past (such as history, archaeology, and class...
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doaj-6baff9ddb7a74be1aa2dd13ee33d8a602020-11-25T03:26:43ZengMDPI AGInformatics2227-97092019-05-01622010.3390/informatics6020020informatics6020020Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital HumanitiesPatricia Martin-Rodilla0Cesar Gonzalez-Perez1CiTIUS, University of Santiago de Compostela, Jenaro de la Fuente Domínguez,s/n 15782 Santiago de Compostela, SpainInstitute of Heritage Sciences (Incipit) Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) Avda. Vigo, s/n. 15705 Santiago de Compostela, SpainResearch in the digital humanities often involves vague information, either because our objects of study lack clearly defined boundaries, or because our knowledge about them is incomplete or hypothetical, which is especially true in disciplines about our past (such as history, archaeology, and classical studies). Most techniques used to represent data vagueness emerged from natural sciences, and lack the expressiveness that would be ideal for humanistic contexts. Building on previous work, we present here a conceptual framework based on the ConML modelling language for the expression of information vagueness in digital humanities. In addition, we propose an implementation on non-relational data stores, which are becoming popular within the digital humanities. Having clear implementation guidelines allow us to employ search engines or big data systems (commonly implemented using non-relational approaches) to handle the vague aspects of information. The proposed implementation guidelines have been validated in practice, and show how we can query a vagueness-aware system without a large penalty in analytical and processing power.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9709/6/2/20vaguenessnon-relational databasesconceptual modellingimprecisionuncertaintyknowledge representationdigital humanitiesConML |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Patricia Martin-Rodilla Cesar Gonzalez-Perez |
spellingShingle |
Patricia Martin-Rodilla Cesar Gonzalez-Perez Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital Humanities Informatics vagueness non-relational databases conceptual modelling imprecision uncertainty knowledge representation digital humanities ConML |
author_facet |
Patricia Martin-Rodilla Cesar Gonzalez-Perez |
author_sort |
Patricia Martin-Rodilla |
title |
Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital Humanities |
title_short |
Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital Humanities |
title_full |
Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital Humanities |
title_fullStr |
Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital Humanities |
title_full_unstemmed |
Conceptualization and Non-Relational Implementation of Ontological and Epistemic Vagueness of Information in Digital Humanities |
title_sort |
conceptualization and non-relational implementation of ontological and epistemic vagueness of information in digital humanities |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Informatics |
issn |
2227-9709 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
Research in the digital humanities often involves vague information, either because our objects of study lack clearly defined boundaries, or because our knowledge about them is incomplete or hypothetical, which is especially true in disciplines about our past (such as history, archaeology, and classical studies). Most techniques used to represent data vagueness emerged from natural sciences, and lack the expressiveness that would be ideal for humanistic contexts. Building on previous work, we present here a conceptual framework based on the ConML modelling language for the expression of information vagueness in digital humanities. In addition, we propose an implementation on non-relational data stores, which are becoming popular within the digital humanities. Having clear implementation guidelines allow us to employ search engines or big data systems (commonly implemented using non-relational approaches) to handle the vague aspects of information. The proposed implementation guidelines have been validated in practice, and show how we can query a vagueness-aware system without a large penalty in analytical and processing power. |
topic |
vagueness non-relational databases conceptual modelling imprecision uncertainty knowledge representation digital humanities ConML |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9709/6/2/20 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT patriciamartinrodilla conceptualizationandnonrelationalimplementationofontologicalandepistemicvaguenessofinformationindigitalhumanities AT cesargonzalezperez conceptualizationandnonrelationalimplementationofontologicalandepistemicvaguenessofinformationindigitalhumanities |
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