Abstract
Historical handwritten Hebrew manuscripts are one of the most unique and authentic evidences of the Jewish culture and thought that survived through the centuries. In order to enable a systematic research of the knowledge embedded in the manuscripts there is a need for a formal conceptual data model with high level of semantic granularity, an ontology. We propose to build a dynamic web-based framework that will allow scholars to create, enrich and consult an "ontopedia" (ontology-based encyclopedia) of Hebrew manuscripts. The framework is based on an ontology especially designed and implemented for this domain and goals. We view a manuscript as a "living entity" and propose to design a new ontological data model of the narrative for a manuscript, stages/milestones in its biography (creation, copying, acquisition). A sequence of events and places constitutes a timeline of history against which manuscripts, people and their relationships can be placed. A large-scale automated reasoning based on the ontology will also enable us to construct a semantically rich social network of people and manuscripts, and to compare the effect of time and place on the manuscripts’ qualitative characteristics and quantitative distribution.
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CITATION STYLE
Zhitomirsky-Geffet, M., & Prebor, G. (2016). Toward an Ontopedia for Historical Hebrew Manuscripts. Frontiers in Digital Humanities, 3. https://doi.org/10.3389/fdigh.2016.00003
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