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      Search Techniques for the Web of Things: A Taxonomy and Survey

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          Abstract

          The Web of Things aims to make physical world objects and their data accessible through standard Web technologies to enable intelligent applications and sophisticated data analytics. Due to the amount and heterogeneity of the data, it is challenging to perform data analysis directly; especially when the data is captured from a large number of distributed sources. However, the size and scope of the data can be reduced and narrowed down with search techniques, so that only the most relevant and useful data items are selected according to the application requirements. Search is fundamental to the Web of Things while challenging by nature in this context, e.g., mobility of the objects, opportunistic presence and sensing, continuous data streams with changing spatial and temporal properties, efficient indexing for historical and real time data. The research community has developed numerous techniques and methods to tackle these problems as reported by a large body of literature in the last few years. A comprehensive investigation of the current and past studies is necessary to gain a clear view of the research landscape and to identify promising future directions. This survey reviews the state-of-the-art search methods for the Web of Things, which are classified according to three different viewpoints: basic principles, data/knowledge representation, and contents being searched. Experiences and lessons learned from the existing work and some EU research projects related to Web of Things are discussed, and an outlook to the future research is presented.

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            CoAP: An Application Protocol for Billions of Tiny Internet Nodes

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              New Generation Sensor Web Enablement

              Many sensor networks have been deployed to monitor Earth’s environment, and more will follow in the future. Environmental sensors have improved continuously by becoming smaller, cheaper, and more intelligent. Due to the large number of sensor manufacturers and differing accompanying protocols, integrating diverse sensors into observation systems is not straightforward. A coherent infrastructure is needed to treat sensors in an interoperable, platform-independent and uniform way. The concept of the Sensor Web reflects such a kind of infrastructure for sharing, finding, and accessing sensors and their data across different applications. It hides the heterogeneous sensor hardware and communication protocols from the applications built on top of it. The Sensor Web Enablement initiative of the Open Geospatial Consortium standardizes web service interfaces and data encodings which can be used as building blocks for a Sensor Web. This article illustrates and analyzes the recent developments of the new generation of the Sensor Web Enablement specification framework. Further, we relate the Sensor Web to other emerging concepts such as the Web of Things and point out challenges and resulting future work topics for research on Sensor Web Enablement.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Role: Academic Editor
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Sensors (Basel)
                Sensors (Basel)
                sensors
                Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
                MDPI
                1424-8220
                27 April 2016
                May 2016
                : 16
                : 5
                : 600
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute for Communication Systems (ICS), University of Surrey, Guildford GU2 7XH, UK; s.de@ 123456surrey.ac.uk (S.D.); k.moessner@ 123456surrey.ac.uk (K.M.)
                [2 ]Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, Ren’ai Road Dushu Lake Higher Education Town SIP, Suzhou 215123, China; Wei.Wang03@ 123456xjtlu.edu.cn
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: yuchao.zhou@ 123456surrey.ac.uk ; Tel.: +44-750-088-9377
                Article
                sensors-16-00600
                10.3390/s16050600
                4883291
                27128918
                62785219-129e-4616-bec6-3aa9b79da100
                © 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

                This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 18 January 2016
                : 21 April 2016
                Categories
                Review

                Biomedical engineering
                search,web of things,internet of things,linked data,streaming data,observation and measurement data,sensors,entities

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