{"title":"Metadata application profile as a mechanism for semantic interoperability in FAIR and open data publishing","authors":"Nishad Thalhath, Mitsuharu Nagamori, Tetsuo Sakaguchi","doi":"10.1016/j.dim.2024.100068","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Application profiles, also known as metadata application profiles, are customised collections of vocabularies adapted from various namespaces and tailored for specific local applications. These profiles act as constrainers and explainers for the (meta)data. Semantic interoperability is the ability of computer systems to exchange data in a mutually understandable manner, facilitating data sharing across diverse platforms and applications without compromising its meaning. As a critical component of semantic interoperability, application profiles enforce semantics to (meta)data, enhancing its openness, interoperability, and reusability. This study assesses the feasibility of representing a comprehensive application profile in a format aligned with the semantic web, ensuring interoperability between profiles and datasets. Dublin Core Description Set Profiles (DSP) is adapted as the modeling framework for metadata application profiles, steering the associated datasets toward RDF compliance. The research outcomes include “Yet Another Metadata Application Profiles” (YAMA) as a preprocessor grounded in the DSP framework for developing and managing metadata application profiles. YAMA facilitates the generation of various standard formats of application profiles, ensuring they are represented in human-readable documentation, machine-actionable forms, and even data validation languages. A data mapping extension to YAMA is proposed to ensure the semantic interoperability of open data, bridging non-RDF data structures to RDF, thus enabling the publication of 5-star open data. This ensures smooth dataset integration and the creation of linkable, semantically rich open datasets. The work emphasizes the pivotal role of application profiles in fortifying the semantic interoperability of (meta)data, thereby elevating dataset openness.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":72769,"journal":{"name":"Data and information management","volume":"9 1","pages":"Article 100068"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Data and information management","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2543925124000044","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Application profiles, also known as metadata application profiles, are customised collections of vocabularies adapted from various namespaces and tailored for specific local applications. These profiles act as constrainers and explainers for the (meta)data. Semantic interoperability is the ability of computer systems to exchange data in a mutually understandable manner, facilitating data sharing across diverse platforms and applications without compromising its meaning. As a critical component of semantic interoperability, application profiles enforce semantics to (meta)data, enhancing its openness, interoperability, and reusability. This study assesses the feasibility of representing a comprehensive application profile in a format aligned with the semantic web, ensuring interoperability between profiles and datasets. Dublin Core Description Set Profiles (DSP) is adapted as the modeling framework for metadata application profiles, steering the associated datasets toward RDF compliance. The research outcomes include “Yet Another Metadata Application Profiles” (YAMA) as a preprocessor grounded in the DSP framework for developing and managing metadata application profiles. YAMA facilitates the generation of various standard formats of application profiles, ensuring they are represented in human-readable documentation, machine-actionable forms, and even data validation languages. A data mapping extension to YAMA is proposed to ensure the semantic interoperability of open data, bridging non-RDF data structures to RDF, thus enabling the publication of 5-star open data. This ensures smooth dataset integration and the creation of linkable, semantically rich open datasets. The work emphasizes the pivotal role of application profiles in fortifying the semantic interoperability of (meta)data, thereby elevating dataset openness.
应用程序配置文件(也称为元数据应用程序配置文件)是自定义的词汇表集合,这些词汇表来自各种名称空间,并针对特定的本地应用程序进行了定制。这些概要文件充当(元)数据的约束和解释器。语义互操作性是计算机系统以相互理解的方式交换数据的能力,促进数据在不同平台和应用程序之间共享而不损害其含义。作为语义互操作性的关键组件,应用程序概要文件将语义强制到(元)数据,增强其开放性、互操作性和可重用性。本研究评估了以与语义网一致的格式表示综合应用程序概要的可行性,确保概要和数据集之间的互操作性。都柏林核心描述集概要文件(DSP)被用作元数据应用程序概要文件的建模框架,引导相关数据集遵从RDF。研究成果包括“Yet Another Metadata Application Profiles”(YAMA)作为一个基于DSP框架的预处理器,用于开发和管理元数据应用profile。YAMA促进了应用程序概要文件的各种标准格式的生成,确保它们以人类可读的文档、机器可操作的形式,甚至数据验证语言表示。提出了对YAMA的数据映射扩展,以确保开放数据的语义互操作性,将非RDF数据结构桥接到RDF,从而实现五星级开放数据的发布。这确保了平稳的数据集集成和创建可链接的、语义丰富的开放数据集。这项工作强调了应用程序配置文件在加强(元)数据的语义互操作性方面的关键作用,从而提高了数据集的开放性。