Publication statistics

Pub. period:1995-2004
Pub. count:4
Number of co-authors:8



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Stuart Maclean:2
Nicholas Gibbins:1
Stephen Harris:1

 

 

Productive colleagues

Hugh Glaser's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Philip T. Cox:30
M. C. Schraefel:28
Trevor J. Smedley:27
 
 
 
May 23

Knowledge is commonly socially constructed, through collaborative efforts towards shared objectives or by dialogues and challenges brought about by different persons' perspectives.

-- G. Salomon (in "Distributed Cognitions: Psychological and Educational Considerations")

 
 

Featured chapter

Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

Help us help you!

 
 

Hugh Glaser

Add description
Add publication

Publications by Hugh Glaser (bibliography)

 what's this?
2004
 
Edit | Del

Schraefel, M. C., Shadbolt, Nigel R., Gibbins, Nicholas, Harris, Stephen and Glaser, Hugh (2004): CS AKTive space: representing computer science in the semantic web. In: Proceedings of the 2004 International Conference on the World Wide Web 2004. pp. 384-392.

We present a Semantic Web application that we call CS AKTive Space. The application exploits a wide range of semantically heterogeneous and distributed content relating to Computer Science research in the UK. This content is gathered on a continuous basis using a variety of methods including harvesting and scraping as well as adopting a range models for content acquisition. The content currently comprises around ten million RDF triples and we have developed storage, retrieval and maintenance methods to support its management. The content is mediated through an ontology constructed for the application domain and incorporates components from other published ontologies. CS AKTive Space supports the exploration of patterns and implications inherent in the content and exploits a variety of visualisations and multi dimensional representations. Knowledge services supported in the application include investigating communities of practice: who is working, researching or publishing with whom. This work illustrates a number of substantial challenges for the Semantic Web. These include problems of referential integrity, tractable inference and interaction support. We review our approaches to these issues and discuss relevant related work.

© All rights reserved Schraefel et al. and/or ACM Press

1998
 
Edit | Del

Roure, David De, Maclean, Stuart and Glaser, Hugh (1998): An Extensible Interpreter for Experimentation with the Semantics of Prograph. In: VL 1998 1998. pp. 76-77.

 
Edit | Del

Cox, Philip T., Glaser, Hugh and Maclean, Stuart (1998): A Visual Development Environment for Parallel Applications. In: VL 1998 1998. pp. 144-151.

1995
 
Edit | Del

Glaser, Hugh and Smedley, Trevor J. (1995): PSH-The Next: Generation of Command Line Interfaces. In: VL 1995 1995. pp. 29-36.

 
Add publication
Show this list on your homepage
 
 

Join the technology elite and advance:

 
1.

Your career

 
2.

Your network

 
 3.

Your skills

 
 
 
 
 
 

Changes to this page (author)

12 Feb 2010: Modified
09 Jul 2009: Added
16 Jun 2009: Added
16 Jun 2009: Added
16 Jun 2009: Added

Page Information

Page maintainer: The Editorial Team
URL: http://www.interaction-design.org/references/authors/hugh_glaser.html

Publication statistics

Pub. period:1995-2004
Pub. count:4
Number of co-authors:8



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Stuart Maclean:2
Nicholas Gibbins:1
Stephen Harris:1

 

 

Productive colleagues

Hugh Glaser's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Philip T. Cox:30
M. C. Schraefel:28
Trevor J. Smedley:27
 
 
 
May 23

Knowledge is commonly socially constructed, through collaborative efforts towards shared objectives or by dialogues and challenges brought about by different persons' perspectives.

-- G. Salomon (in "Distributed Cognitions: Psychological and Educational Considerations")

 
 

Featured chapter

Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

Help us help you!