Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1864973881> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 98 of
98
with 100 items per page.
- W1864973881 abstract "Over the last decade, there has been growing interest in the assessment of the performance of researchers, research groups, universities and even countries. The assessment of productivity is an instrument to select and promote personnel, assign research grants and measure the results of research projects. One particular assessment approach is bibliometrics i.e., the quantitative analysis of scientific publications through citation and content analysis.However, there is little consensus today on how research evaluation should be performed, and it is commonly acknowledged that the quantitative metrics available today are largely unsatisfactory.The process is very often highly subjective, and there are no universally accepted criteria.A number of dierent scientific data sources available on the Web (e.g., DBLP, Microsoft Academic Search, Google Scholar) that are used for such analysis purposes. Taking data from these diverse sources, performing the analysis and visualizing results in different ways is not a trivial and straight forward task. Moreover, the data taken from these sources cannot be used as it is due to the problem of name disambiguation, where many researchers share identical names or an author dierent name variations appear in the data. We believe that the personalization of the evaluation processes is a key element for the appropriate use and practical success of these research impact evaluation tasks. Moreover, people involved in such evaluation processes are not always IT experts and hence not capable to crawl data sources, merge them and compute the needed evaluation procedures.The recent emergence of mashup tools has refueled research on end-user development, i.e., on enabling end-users without programming skills to produce their own applications. Yet, similar to what happened with analogous promises in web service composition and business process management, research has mostly focused on technology and, as a consequence, has failed its objective. Plain technology (e.g., SOAP/WSDL web services) or simple modeling languages (e.g., Yahoo! Pipes) do not convey enough meaning to non-programmers. We believe that the heart of the problem is that it is impractical to design tools that are generic enough to cover a wide range of application domains, powerful enough to enable the specification of non-trivial logic, and simple enough to be actually accessible to non-programmers. At some point, we need to give up something. In our view, this something is generality since reducing expressive power would mean supporting only the development of toy applications, which is useless, while simplicity is our major aim.This thesis presents a novel approach for an effective end-user development, specifically for non-programmers. That is, we introduce a domain-specific approach to mashups that speaks the language of users, i.e., that is aware of the terminology, concepts, rules, and conventions (the domain) the user is comfortable with. We show what developing a domain-specific mashup platform means, which role the mashup meta-model and the domain model play and how these can be merged into a domain-specific mashup metamodel. We illustrate the approach by implementing a generic mashup platform, whose capabilities are based on our proposed mashup meta-model. Further, we illustrate how the generic mashup platform can be tailored for a specific domain, which is achieved through the development of ResEval Mash tool that is specifically developed for the research evaluation domain. Moreover, the thesis proposed an architectural design for mashup platforms, specifically it presents a novel approach for data-intensive mashup-based web applications, which proved to be a substantial contribution. The proposed approach is suitable for those applications, which deal with large amounts of data that travel between client and server.For the evaluation of our work and to determine the effectiveness and usability of our mashup tool, we performed two separate user studies. The results of the user studies confirm that domain-specific mashup tools indeed lower the entry barrier for non-technical users in mashup development. The methodology presented in this thesis is generic and can be applied for other domains.Moreover, following the methodological approach the developed mashup platform is also generic, that is, it can be tailored for other domains." @default.
- W1864973881 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1864973881 creator A5021572071 @default.
- W1864973881 date "2013-03-22" @default.
- W1864973881 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W1864973881 title "An Effective End-User Development Approach through Domain-Specific Mashups for Research Impact Evaluation" @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1496121555 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1541941341 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1542712300 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1554939242 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1649645444 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1754258600 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1808011207 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1977714176 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1986353537 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W1988602845 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2027261940 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2036452579 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2041063655 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2065974896 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2095043299 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2097027133 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2097385209 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2098931293 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2104780365 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2106819714 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2116209312 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2128877837 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2129889634 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2134318033 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2139081384 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2140283616 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2167974070 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2296083621 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2335267818 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2342091124 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W2911537016 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W3185189058 @default.
- W1864973881 cites W47658817 @default.
- W1864973881 hasPublicationYear "2013" @default.
- W1864973881 type Work @default.
- W1864973881 sameAs 1864973881 @default.
- W1864973881 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W1864973881 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1864973881 hasAuthorship W1864973881A5021572071 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C110875604 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C111919701 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C136699151 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C136764020 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C178315738 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C183003079 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C196126337 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C197129107 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C23123220 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C2522767166 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C2778805511 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConcept C98045186 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C110875604 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C111919701 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C136699151 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C136764020 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C178315738 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C183003079 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C196126337 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C197129107 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C23123220 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C2522767166 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C2778805511 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C41008148 @default.
- W1864973881 hasConceptScore W1864973881C98045186 @default.
- W1864973881 hasLocation W18649738811 @default.
- W1864973881 hasOpenAccess W1864973881 @default.
- W1864973881 hasPrimaryLocation W18649738811 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W133412538 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W154518718 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W1748675148 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W187697605 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2046003045 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2046576694 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2119687406 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2122401699 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2142136553 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2166362105 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2189375180 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2205038921 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2294895571 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2395178343 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2608358627 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2798211964 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2908144692 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W3045907113 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W1426980642 @default.
- W1864973881 hasRelatedWork W2576836783 @default.
- W1864973881 isParatext "false" @default.
- W1864973881 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W1864973881 magId "1864973881" @default.
- W1864973881 workType "article" @default.