Ph.D
Group : Bioinformatics
Linked Data at university: the LinkedWiki platform
Starts on 01/01/2014
Advisor : COHEN-BOULAKIA, Sarah
Funding :
Affiliation : Université Paris-Saclay
Laboratory : LRI - BioInfo
Defended on 25/01/2019, committee :
Directrice de thèse :
- Sarah Cohen-Boulakia - Professeure, U. Paris-Sud,U. Paris-Saclay — LRI
Co-directeur de thèse :
- Serge Abiteboul - Directeur de Recherche Inria, ENS Paris
Examinateurs :
- Khalid Belhajjame - Maître de conférences, Université Paris Dauphine — LAMSADE
- Anne Doucet - Professeure, Sorbonne Université — LIP6
- Philippe Pucheral - Professeur, Université de Versailles-Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, Inria
Rapporteurs :
- Cedric Du Mouza - Maître de conférences HDR, Cnam Paris
- Dan Vodislav - Professeur, U. Cergy-Pontoise — ETIS
Research activities :
Abstract :
The Center for Data Science of the University of Paris-Saclay deployed a platform compatible with Linked Data in 2016. Because researchers face many difficulties utilizing these technologies, an approach and then a platform we call LinkedWiki were designed and tested over the university’s cloud (IAAS) to enable the creation of modular virtual search environments (VREs) compatible with Linked Data. We are thus able to offer researchers a means to discover, produce and reuse the research data available within the Linked Open Data, i.e., the global information system emerging at the scale of the internet. This experience enabled us to demonstrate that the operational use of Linked Data within a university is perfectly possible with this approach. However, some problems persist, such as (i) the respect of protocols and (ii) the lack of adapted tools to interrogate the Linked Open Data with SPARQL. We propose solutions to both these problems.
In order to be able to verify the respect of a SPARQL protocol within the Linked Data of a university, we have created the SPARQL Score indicator which evaluates the compliance of the SPARQL services before their deployments in a university’s information system.
In addition, to help researchers interrogate the LOD, we implemented a SPARQLets-Finder, a demonstrator which shows that it is possible to facilitate the design of SPARQL queries using autocompletion tools without prior knowledge of the RDF schemas within the LOD.