Affiliation:
1. University of Aveiro, Portugal
Abstract
Enterprise 2.0 aims to help employees, customers, and suppliers collaborate, share, and organize information. As governments are relevant partners for enterprises (legislation, contracts, etc.) e-government platforms need to be ready for Enterprise 2.0 to what concerns e-government interactions. The public sector holds huge quantities of information and just a small proportion is relevant to each enterprise. Enterprises should only be confronted with relevant information and not flooded with lots of data. This implies data organization with semantic description and services using open standards. The goal is to build a durable information infrastructure for government that can be readily accessed by enterprises. The authors propose a conceptual model for government information provisioning. The rationale for this proposal is to motivate the creation of durable, standard, and open government information infrastructures. The model acquires information from natural language documents and represents it using ontology. A proof-of-concept prototype and its preliminary results are presented.
Reference44 articles.
1. Fads and Facts of E-Government: A Review of Impacts of E-government (2003–2009)
2. DBpedia - A crystallization point for the Web of Data
3. The RavenClaw dialog management framework: Architecture and systems
4. Cardoso, N. (2008). Rembrandt-reconhecimento de entidades mencionadas baseado em relações e análise detalhada do texto. Encontro do Segundo HAREM, PROPOR 2008.
5. Carlson, A., Betteridge, J., Hruschka, E. R., Jr., & Mitchell, T. M. (2009). Coupling semi-supervised learning of categories and relations.