911±¬ÁÏÍø

News

Two awards for Linked Data Finland service platform

Eero Hyvönen, Jouni Tuominen and Eetu Mäkelä convinced the jury at the Apps4Finland competition.

The Linked Data Finland service platform won the challenge series for science and research, as well as data processing in the Apps4Finland competition.

Professor Eero Hyvönen at the award ceremony. Photo: Antti Kokkola

The victory in the Science and Research Series was based on the result of a public vote and the evaluation of a panel of experts from the Open Science and Research project. The victorious Linked data Finland project has initiated and promoted the utilisation of resources for research information, and has developed ground-breaking semantic networking technologies. The project has focused on the automated production of semantic information, with mashup publication as ready-to-use web services, as well as the production of new context-sensitive applications.

Linked Data Finland also won the Data Processing Series.  The basis for the award was the ability of the winning project to combine data sets from different sources. Linked Data Finland offers end-users a wide range of services, as well as open interfaces for service developers. Digital cultural heritage related applications were also regarded as important.

About the Linked Data Finland service platform

The Linked Data Finland platform aims to promote the open interoperable publication of datasets and the ability to exploit them for a variety of applications. It is based on the latest semantic W3C (the coordinating body for World Wide Web infrastructure) web standards and practices, which enables intelligent searching via content and structure.

Dozens of data sets have been published on the platform, such as Finnish legislation from the Ministry of Justice, the Finnish Wikipedia based DBpedia, the library web service Kirjasampo, a semantic version of the Kalevala, museum collections, over a million bird spotting observations on Tiira.fi, Linked Open Aalto etc. In addition to this, numerous applications have been developed for these data sets. The Kirjasampo web service for example has had over 60 000 visitors a month. The platform has also been applied to research cooperation in the international Digital Humanities project between Stanford, Oxford and Colorado universities.

911±¬ÁÏÍø has been involved in the research work along with the University of Helsinki's Department of Computer Science. The platform development has been funded by Tekes, the Finnish Cultural Foundation and a consortium of twenty or so Finnish public organisations and private companies.

 

Additional information:

Professor Eero Hyvönen
eero.hyvonen@aalto.fi
Tel. +358(0)50 3841618
Semantic Computing Research Group
Department of Media Technology
911±¬ÁÏÍø School of Science
Research group web pages: http://www.seco.tkk.fi

See also news for January 24, 2014

 

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Collage of workshops, group photos and presentations from the first year of the Aalto Inventors programme.
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

Aalto Inventors turns one: A year of bridging research and real-world impact

Aalto Inventors marks its first anniversary, having engaged 190 researchers across six cohorts in fields including AI, quantum, and biomaterials. New cohorts are planned for the next academic year, stay tuned and join the waitlist.
Colourful architectural models on a large white table in an exhibition hall
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

An architectural project in Milan brought together children’s ideas and the visions of leading architects

911±¬ÁÏ꿉۪s Department of Architecture participated in the international One Earth – House of the Heart project, which was presented in April at Milan Design Week.
Companies report on cybersecurity
Research & Art Published:

Companies disclose more on cybersecurity – but markets remain indifferent

U.S. companies are reporting on cybersecurity in greater detail, yet stock market reactions remain muted. A new study by the University of Vaasa and 911±¬ÁÏÍø shows that mandatory cybersecurity disclosure does not prompt reactions from investors or stock analysts. Instead, the main benefits appear to materialise within firms themselves.
Tanja Kallio
Awards and Recognition Published:

Tanja Kallio has received the Magnus Ehrnrooth Foundation’s chemistry prize

Tanja Kallio has received the Magnus Ehrnrooth Foundation’s chemistry prize