The Open Provenance Model core specification (v1.1). Moreau, L., Clifford, B., Freire, J., Futrelle, J., Gil, Y., Groth, P., Kwasnikowska, N., Miles, S., Missier, P., Myers, J., Plale, B., Simmhan, Y., Stephan, E., & Den Bussche, J. Future Generation Computer Systems, 2011.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
The Open Provenance Model is a model of provenance that is designed to meet the following requirements: (1) Allow provenance information to be exchanged between systems, by means of a compatibility layer based on a shared provenance model. (2) Allow developers to build and share tools that operate on such a provenance model. (3) Define provenance in a precise, technology-agnostic manner. (4) Support a digital representation of provenance for any "thing", whether produced by computer systems or not. (5) Allow multiple levels of description to coexist. (6) Define a core set of rules that identify the valid inferences that can be made on provenance representation. This document contains the specification of the Open Provenance Model (v1.1) resulting from a community effort to achieve inter-operability in the Provenance Challenge series. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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 title = {The Open Provenance Model core specification (v1.1)},
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 year = {2011},
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 abstract = {The Open Provenance Model is a model of provenance that is designed to meet the following requirements: (1) Allow provenance information to be exchanged between systems, by means of a compatibility layer based on a shared provenance model. (2) Allow developers to build and share tools that operate on such a provenance model. (3) Define provenance in a precise, technology-agnostic manner. (4) Support a digital representation of provenance for any "thing", whether produced by computer systems or not. (5) Allow multiple levels of description to coexist. (6) Define a core set of rules that identify the valid inferences that can be made on provenance representation. This document contains the specification of the Open Provenance Model (v1.1) resulting from a community effort to achieve inter-operability in the Provenance Challenge series. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Moreau, L. and Clifford, B. and Freire, J. and Futrelle, J. and Gil, Y. and Groth, P. and Kwasnikowska, N. and Miles, S. and Missier, P. and Myers, J. and Plale, B. and Simmhan, Y. and Stephan, E. and Den Bussche, J.V.},
 doi = {10.1016/j.future.2010.07.005},
 journal = {Future Generation Computer Systems},
 number = {6}
}

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