{
    "o:id": 15052,
    "url": "https://chloe.cnr.it/s/BiDiAr/item/15052",
    "o:resource_template": "Book Section",
    "o:resource_class": "bibo:BookSection",
    "dcterms:title": [
        "Ontologies for cultural heritage"
    ],
    "dcterms:creator": [
        "Doerr, Martin"
    ],
    "dcterms:publisher": [
        "Springer"
    ],
    "dcterms:date": [
        "2009"
    ],
    "dcterms:abstract": [
        "In the cultural heritage domain information systems are increasingly deployed, digital representations of physical objects are produced in immense numbers and there is a strong political pressure on memory institutions to make their holdings accessible to the public in digital form. The sector splits into a set of disciplines with highly specialized fields. Due to the resulting diversity, one can hardly speak about a “domain” in the sense of “domain ontologies” [33]. On the other side, study and research of the past is highly interdisciplinary. Characteristically, archaeology employs a series of “auxiliary” disciplines, such as archaeometry, archaeomedicine, archaeobotany, archaeometallurgy, archaeoastronomy, etc., but also historical sources and social theories."
    ],
    "dcterms:isPartOf": [
        "Handbook on Ontologies"
    ],
    "dcterms:spatial": [
        "Berlin-Heidelberg"
    ],
    "bibo:editor": [
        "Staab, Steffen",
        "Studer, Rudi"
    ],
    "bibo:doi": [
        "https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-92673-3_21"
    ],
    "bibo:pages": [
        "463-486"
    ],
    "foaf:homepage": [
        "https://www.zotero.org/groups/5293298/bidiar/items/SMRCCS3I/item-list"
    ]
},
