Search results for "visual language"

showing 4 items of 14 documents

A Framework for Opening Data and Creating Advanced Services in the Health and Social Fields

2016

Open data is publicly available data that can be universally and readily accessed, used, and redistributed. Open data holds particular potential in the health and social sectors but, presently, health and social data are often published in a ‘closed’ format.There are different tools that allow to ‘open’ data, clean, structure and process them in order to elaborate them and build advanced services but, unfortunately, there is no single tool that can be used to perform all different tasks. We believe that the availability of Open Data in the health and social fields should be greatly increased and a way for creating new health and social services should be provided. In this paper, we present …

World Wide WebStructure (mathematical logic)Open dataOpen Data Health Social Visual Framework Iconic Visual Languages Online ServicesSettore INF/01 - InformaticaComputer scienceOrder (business)Process (engineering)020204 information systems0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering020207 software engineeringSocial Welfare02 engineering and technologyProceedings of the 17th International Conference on Computer Systems and Technologies 2016
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XA2C Framework for XML Alteration/Adaptation

2010

XML has crossed the borders of software engineering and has spread to other areas such as e-commerce, identification, information storage, instant messaging and others. It is used to communicate crucial data over these domains. Thus, allowing non-expert programmers to manipulate and control their XML data is essential. In the literature, this issue has been dealt with from 3 perspectives: (i) XML alteration/adaptation techniques requiring a certain level of expertise to be implemented and are not unified yet, (ii) mashups, which are not formally defined yet and are not specific to XML data, and (iii) XML-oriented visual languages based on structural transformations and data extraction mainl…

[INFO.INFO-PL]Computer Science [cs]/Programming Languages [cs.PL]DatabaseProgramming languagecomputer.internet_protocolComputer science02 engineering and technologycomputer.software_genre[INFO.INFO-PL] Computer Science [cs]/Programming Languages [cs.PL]Set (abstract data type)Identification (information)Visual languageData extraction020204 information systems[ INFO.INFO-PL ] Computer Science [cs]/Programming Languages [cs.PL]0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering020201 artificial intelligence & image processingMashupControl (linguistics)Adaptation (computer science)computerXMLComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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Icons: Visual representation to enrich requirements engineering work

2013

Adapting icons in requirements engineering can support the multifaceted needs of stakeholders. Conventional ap- proaches to RE are mainly highlighted in diagrams. This paper introduces icon-based information as a way to represent ideas and concepts in the requirements engineering domain. We report on icon artifacts that support requirements engi- neering work such as priority types, status states and stakeholder kinds. We evaluate how users interpret meanings of icons and the efficacy of icon prototypes shaped to represent those requirements attributes. Our hypothesis is whether practitioners can recognize the icons’ meaning in terms of their functional representation. According to the empi…

ta113Requirements engineeringComputer scienceProcess (engineering)Interpretation (philosophy)Stakeholdervisuaalinen kieliikonitDomain (software engineering)Visual languagevaatimusmäärittelyHuman–computer interactionvisual languagekulttuuriiconsvaatimustenhallintaIconstakeholdercomputercomputer.programming_languageMeaning (linguistics)
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Hungarian private linguistic landscape in South-West Slovakia

2014

In the field of Linguistic Landscape research little attention has been paid to the situations where a minoritized group gives the regional majority, such as South-­‐West Slovakia where Hungarians form the majority. A clear majority of public signs, also in the region with a Hungarian majority, are only in Slovak, especially in the ‘official’, public sphere. In rural communities, signs posted by private citizens can be relatively frequent, too. In the truly non-­‐ commercial private sphere, minorities have autonomy in public language choice. I present the local practices and interpretations of the private linguistic landscape in two ‘Hungarian’ villages in South-­‐West Slovakia in the light…

visual language useSlovakiaunkarin kielikyltitsemiotic landscapelinguistic landscape
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