The Open Provenance Model is a model of provenance that is designed to meet the following requirements: (1) Allow provenance information to be exchanged between systems, by means of a compatibility layer based on a shared provenance model. (2) Allow developers to build and share tools that operate on such a provenance model. (3) Define provenance in a precise, technology-agnostic manner. (4) Support a digital representation of provenance for any "thing", whether produced by computer systems or not. (5) Allow multiple levels of description to coexist. (6) Define a core set of rules that identify the valid inferences that can be made on provenance representation. This document contains the specification of the Open Provenance Model (v1.1) resulting from a community effort to achieve inter-operability in the Provenance Challenge series. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Moreau, L., Clifford, B., Freire, J., Futrelle, J., Gil, Y., Groth, P., … Den Bussche, J. V. (2011). The Open Provenance Model core specification (v1.1). In Future Generation Computer Systems (Vol. 27, pp. 743–756). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.future.2010.07.005
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.