The Semantic Web is a vision that has sparked a wide-ranging enthusiasm for a new generation of the Web. The Semantic Web is happening. The central idea of that vision is to make the Web more understandable to computer programs so that people can make more use of this gigantic asset. The use of metadata (data about data) can clearly indicate the meaning of data on the Web so as to provide computers enough information to handle such data. On the future Web, many additional layers will be required if we want computer programs to handle the semantics (the meaning of data) properly without human - tervention. Such layers should deal with the hierarchical relationships between me- ings, their similarities and differences, logical rules for making new inferences from the existing data and metadata, and so on. Dozens of new technologies have emerged recently to implement these ideas. XML (eXtensible Markup Language) forms the foundation of the future Web, RDF (Resource Description Framework), OWL (Web Ontology Language) and many other technologies help to erect a “multistory” bui- ing of the Semantic Web layer by layer by adding new features and new types of metadata. According to Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the current Web and the Semantic Web, it may take up to ten years to complete the building. The new Web will be much more complex than the current one and will contain enormous amounts of metadata as well as data.
This pioneering book deals specifically with the visualization of the Second-Generation Web. Now in its second edition it has been completely revised and updated, and includes extensive new material. It focuses on key topics including:
• Visualization of semantic and structural information and metadata in the context of the emerging Semantic Web
• Ontology-based information visualization and the use of graphically represented ontologies
• Semantic visualizations using topic maps and graph techniques
• Web Services, e-commerce and web search applications
• Recommender systems for filtering and recommending on the Semantic Web
• SVG and X3D as new XML-based languages for 2D and 3D visualisations
• Methods used to construct and visualize high quality metadata and ontologies
• Navigating and exploring XML documents using interactive multimedia interfaces
• The use of semantic association networks as well as social networks on the Second-Generation Web
• Semantically enhanced solutions for the medical community
• Semantic-oriented use of existing visualization methods
The design of visual interfaces for e-commerce and information retrieval is currently a challenging area of practical web development. Most of the techniques and methods discussed can be applied now, making this book essential reading for web developers and end users as well as visualisation researchers.