--- a/ontology/prov-o-html-sections/description-starting-points.inc.html Tue Jul 03 14:15:23 2012 -0400
+++ b/ontology/prov-o-html-sections/description-starting-points.inc.html Tue Jul 03 14:17:29 2012 -0400
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
and during their lifespan can <strong>use</strong> and <strong>generate</strong> a variety of Entities (described using
<a href='#used' class="qname">prov:used</a> and <a href='#wasGeneratedBy' class="qname">prov:wasGeneratedBy</a>, respectively).
For example, a blog writing activity may use a particular dataset and generate a bar chart.
- Provenance chains of alternating Activities and Entities can be created by applying usage and generation.
+ Provenance chains of Activities and Entities can be created by applying usage and generation.
</p>
<p>In addiition, we can say that an Activity <a href='#wasInformedBy' class="qname">prov:wasInformedBy</a>
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@
Activity, but the Entity itself is not interesting. So, the <span class="repeated">prov:wasInformedBy</span> property allows the assertion of provenance chains comprising only Activities.
</p>
- <p>Provenance chains of Entities can be formed without Activities using the <a href='#wasDerivedFrom' class="qname">prov:wasDerivedFrom</a> property.
+ <p>Provenance chains comprising only Entities can be formed without Activities using the <a href='#wasDerivedFrom' class="qname">prov:wasDerivedFrom</a> property.
A derivation is a transformation of one entity into another. For example, if the Activity that created the bar chart is not interesting,
then we can say that the bar chart <span class="repeated">prov:wasDerivedFrom</span> the dataset.
Arbitrary RDF properties can be used to describe the fixed aspects of an Entity that are interesting to a particular application (for example,