LDK Conference Archives - DBpedia Association https://www.dbpedia.org/ldk-conference/ Global and Unified Access to Knowledge Graphs Mon, 12 Feb 2024 16:49:50 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.dbpedia.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/cropped-dbpedia-webicon-32x32.png LDK Conference Archives - DBpedia Association https://www.dbpedia.org/ldk-conference/ 32 32 A year with DBpedia – Retrospective Part 2/2023 https://www.dbpedia.org/blog/a-year-with-dbpedia-retrospective-part-2-2023/ Thu, 04 Jan 2024 13:45:24 +0000 https://www.dbpedia.org/?p=5672 This is the final part of our journey through 2023. In the previous blog post we have presented the DBpedia highlights. Now we will take a look at the second half of 2023 and give an outlook for 2024. Tutorial @  Language, Data and Knowledge conference On 13th of September, 2023, an exciting tutorial took […]

The post A year with DBpedia – Retrospective Part 2/2023 appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>
This is the final part of our journey through 2023. In the previous blog post we have presented the DBpedia highlights. Now we will take a look at the second half of 2023 and give an outlook for 2024.

Tutorial @  Language, Data and Knowledge conference

On 13th of September, 2023, an exciting tutorial took place at the University of Vienna in the Center for Translation Studies as part of the LDK 2023. The LDK conference focuses on the acquisition, maintenance and use of language data in the context of data science and knowledge-based applications. The tutorial was opened by Milan Dojchinovski (InfAI, DBpedia Association, CTU in Prague). This was followed by three sessions, which were accompanied by many real-world practical use cases, on the DBpedia Knowledge Graph, the infrastructure and the use of the databus data publishing platform. Check more details on our events page

DBpedia Day @ SEMANTiCS in Leipzig 

DBpedia Day was once again part of the program at this year’s SEMANTICS conference 2023. It was held on 20th of September at the HYPERION Hotel Leipzig with up to 100 DBpedians. Once again this year, our CEO Sebastian Hellmann opened the day with a presentation of the “DBpedia Databus version 2.1.0”. This was followed by the exciting keynote speech “Towards Foundation Models for Data Spaces” by Edward Curry from the University of Galway, Ireland. Afterwards, we organized the member session and the DBpedia Science Talk session. All slides can also be found on our  events page.

Databus

Databus pre-launch announcement

We are in the final stage of the DBpedia Databus open software release (GitHub). Remaining issues include quality of life and UI improvements. Check out the Databus feature matrix for our lightweight, scalable, adaptable, powerful Data Catalog Platform (direct download link, persistent data identifier on the databus). Contact dbpedia@infai.org for demo, business, or research proposal inquiries.

Databus excels at cataloging de-central data of any filetype using RDF/DCAT. We selected a few initial focal use cases, where the Databus serves as:

  1. AIModelHub for AI training data, models, validation, and deployment.
  2. Research Data Management Catalog for research institutes and communities.
  3. Supply-Chain-Management Platform for product information collection along the supply chain and construction of Digital Product Passports.
  4. Community Data Portal, e.g., for the DBpedia Community.

DBpedia Contributions will be enabled soon, taking DBpedia to the moon! 🚀

In DBpedia’s future, the Databus will be used to collect community contributions more effectively, giving DBpedia an enormous boost in quantity and quality. https://databus.dbpedia.org already catalogs over 350k files with over 1 Million file downloads per month!  We are preparing showcases, templates, and documentation for these community contribution types:

  1. Community Extensions such as caligraph.org or AI-improved abstracts.
  2. Community Link Contributions for inclusion in the main graph.
  3. RDF profiles for DBpedia Users and Members (FOAF, Schema.org, WebID) via Databus Accounts (including publication of expertise).
  4. Dockerized RDF Tool Deployment so you can automatically load DBpedia and other RDF data into your favorite RDF tools via Databus collections. Our Databus-powered Virtuoso SPARQL Endpoint Quickstart Docker has already been deployed over 150k times! 

We do hope we will meet you and some new faces during our events next year. The association wants to get to know you because DBpedia is a community effort and would not continue to develop, improve and grow without you. We plan to have a tutorial at the LREC-COLING 2024 conference and a meeting at SEMANTiCS, Sep 17-19, 2024, conference in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Stay safe and check Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn or or subscribe to our Newsletter for the latest news and information.

Yours,

Julia & Maria

on behalf of the DBpedia Association

The post A year with DBpedia – Retrospective Part 2/2023 appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>
Home Sweet Home – The 13th DBpedia Community Meeting https://www.dbpedia.org/blog/home-sweet-home-the-13th-dbpedia-community-meeting/ Tue, 18 Jun 2019 12:52:59 +0000 https://blog.dbpedia.org/?p=1137 After a very successful LDK conference May 20th-21st, representatives of the European DBpedia community met at Villa Ida Mediencampus,  on Thursday, May 23rd, to present their work with DBpedia and to exchange about the DBpedia Databus.  

The post Home Sweet Home – The 13th DBpedia Community Meeting appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>
For the second time now, we co-located one of our DBpedia community meetings with the LDK-conference. After the previous edition in Galway two years ago, It was Leipzig’s turn to host the event. Thus, the 13th DBpedia community meeting took place in this beautiful city which is also home to the DBpedia Association’s head office. Win, Win we’d say. 

After a very successful LDK conference May 20th-21st, representatives of the European DBpedia community met at Villa Ida Mediencampus,  on Thursday, May 23rd, to present their work with DBpedia and to exchange about the DBpedia Databus.  

For those of you who missed it or for those who want a little retrospective on the day, this blog post provides you with a short LDK-wrap-up as well as a recap of our DBpedia Day.

First things first

First and foremost, we would like to thank LDK organizers for co-locating our meeting and thus enabling fruitful synergies, and a platform for the DBpedia community to exchange.

LDK

The first presentation that kicked-off the conference was given by Prof. Christiane Fellbaum from Princeton University. The topic of her talk was on “Mapping the Lexicons of Signs and Words” with the main focus on her research of mapping WordNet and SignStudy, a resource for American Sign Language. Shortly after, Prof Eduard Werner from Leipzig University gave a very exciting talk on the “Sorbian languages”. He discussed the nature of the Sorbian languages, their historical background, and the unfortunate imminent extinction of lower Sorbian due to a decline of native speakers.

The first day of LDK was full of exciting presentations related to various language-oriented topics. Researchers exchanged about linguistic vocabularies, SPARQL query recommendations, role and reference grammar, language detection, entity recognition, machine translation, under-resourced languages, metaphor identification, event detection and linked data in general. The first day ended with fruitful discussions during the poster session. After at the end of the first conference day, LDK visitors had the chance to mingle with locals in some of Leipzig’s most exciting bars during a pub crawl.

Prof. Christian Bizer from the University of Mannheim opened the second day with a keynote on “Schema.org Annotations and Web Tables: Underexploited Semantic Nuggets on the Web?”. In his talk, he gave a nice overview of the research on knowledge extraction around the large-scale Web Data Commons corpus, findings, open challenges and possible exploitations of this corpus.

The second day was busy with four sessions, each populated with presentations on exciting topics ranging from relation classification, dictionary linking and entity linking, to terminology models, topical thesauri and morphology.

The series of presentations was ended with an Organ Prelude played by David Timm, the University Music Director at the Leipzig University. Finally, the day and the conference was concluded with a conference dinner at Moritzbastei, one of Leipzig’s famous cultural centres.

DBpedia Day

On May 23rd, the DBpedia Community met for the 13th DBpedia community meeting. The event attracted more than 60 participants who extended their LDK experience or followed our call to Leipzig.

Opening & keynotes

The meeting was opened by Dr. Sebastian Hellmann, the executive director of the DBpedia Association. He gave an overview of the latest developments and achievements around DBpedia, with the main focus on the DBpedia Databus technologies. The first keynote was given by Dr. Peter Haase, from metaphacts, with an unusual interactive presentation on “Linked Data Fun with DBpedia”. The second keynote speaker was Prof. Heiko Paulheim, presenting findings, challenges and results from his work on the construction of the DBkWiki Knowledge Graph by exploiting the DBpedia extraction framework.

Showcase session

The showcases session started with a presentation given by  Krzysztof Węcel on “Citations and references in DBpedia”, followed by Peter Nancke with a presentation on the “TeBaQA Question Answering System”, Maribel Acosta Deibe speaking about “Crowdsourcing the Quality of DBpedia” and finally, a presentation by Angus Addlesee on “Data Reconciliation using DBpedia”.

NLP & DBpedia session

The DBpedia & NLP session was opened by  Diego Moussallem presenting the results from his work on “Generating Natural Language from RDF Data”. The second presentation was given by Christian Jilek on the topic of “Named Entity Recognition for Real-Time Applications”, which at the same time won the best research paper at the LDK conference. Next, Jonathan Kobbe presented the best student paper at the LDK conference on the topic of “Argumentative Relation Classification”. Finally, Edgard Marx closed the session with an overview presentation on “From the word to the resource”.

 

Side-Event – Hackathon

The “Artificial Intelligence for Smart Agriculture” Hackathon focused on enhancing the usability of automatic analysis tools which utilize semantic big data for agriculture, as well as conducting an outreach of the DataBio project for the DBpedia community. The event was supported by PNO, Spacebel, PSNC, and InfAI e.V.

We improved the visualization module of Albatross, a platform for processing and analyzing Linked Open Data, and added functionalities to geo-L, the geospatial link discovery tool.  

In addition, we presented a paper about Linked Data publication pipelines, focusing on agri-related data, at the co-located LSWT conference.

Wrap Up

After the event, DBpedians joined the DBpedia Association in the nearby pub Gosenschenke to delve into more vital talks about the Semantic Web world, Linked Data & DBpedia.

In case you missed the event, all slides and presentations are available on our website. Further insights feedback and photos about the event can be found on Twitter via #DBpediaLeipzig.

We are currently looking forward to the next DBpedia Community Meeting, on Sept, 12th in Karlsruhe, Germany. This meeting is co-located with the SEMANTiCS Conference. Contributions are still welcome. Just ping us via dbpedia@infai.org and show us what you’ve got. You should also get in touch with us if you want to host a DBpedia Meetup yourself. We will help you with the program, the dissemination or organizational matters of the event if need be.

Stay tuned, check Twitter, Facebook, and the website, or subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news and updates.

 

Your DBpedia Association

The post Home Sweet Home – The 13th DBpedia Community Meeting appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and DBpedia https://www.dbpedia.org/blog/dbpedia-databus-is-a-driver-for-ai/ Thu, 11 Apr 2019 13:20:14 +0000 https://blog.dbpedia.org/?p=1132 The DBpedia Databus  - our digital factory Platform -  is one of many drivers that will help to build the much-needed data infrastructure for ML and AI to prosper.

The post Artificial Intelligence (AI) and DBpedia appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is currently the central subject of the just announced ‘Year of Science’  by the Federal German Ministry. In recent years, new approaches were explored on how to facilitate AI, new mindsets were established and new tools were developed, new technologies implemented. AI is THE key technology of the 21st century. Together with Machine Learning (ML), it transforms society faster than ever before and, will lead humankind to its digital future.

In this digital transformation era, success will be based on using analytics to discover the insights locked in the massive volume of data being generated today. Success with AI and ML depends on having the right infrastructure to process the data.[1]

The Value of Data Governance

One key element to facilitate ML and AI for the digital future of Europe, are ‘decentralized semantic data flows’, as stated by Sören Auer, a founding member of DBpedia and current director at TIB, during a meeting about the digital future in Germany at the Bundestag. He further commented that major AI breakthroughs were indeed facilitated by easily accessible datasets, whereas the Algorithms used were comparatively old.

In conclusion, Auer reasons that the actual value lies in data governance. Infact, in order to guarantee progress in  AI, the development of a common and transparent understanding of data is necessary. [2]

DBpedia Databus – Digital Factory Platform

The DBpedia Databus  – our digital factory Platform –  is one of many drivers that will help to build the much-needed data infrastructure for ML and AI to prosper.  With the DBpedia Databus, we create a hub that facilitates a ‘networked data-economy’ revolving around the publication of data. Upholding the motto, Unified and Global Access to Knowledge, the databus facilitates exchanging, curating and accessing data between multiple stakeholders  – always, anywhere. Publishing data on the Databus means connecting and comparing (your) data to the network. Check our current DBpedia releases via http://downloads.dbpedia.org/repo/dev/.

DBpediaDay – & AI for Smart Agriculture

Furthermore, you can learn about the DBpedia Databus during our 13th DBpedia Community meeting, co-located with LDK conference,  in Leipzig, May 2019. Additionally, as a special treat for you, we also offer an AI side-event on May 23rd, 2019.

May we present you the thinktank and hackathon  – “Artificial Intelligence for Smart Agriculture”. The goal of this event is to develop new ideas and small tools which can demonstrate the use of AI in the agricultural domain or the use of AI for a sustainable bio-economy. In that regard, a special focus will be on the use and the impact of linked data for AI components. 

In short, the two-part event, co-located with LSWT & DBpediaDay, comprises workshops, on-site team hacking as well as presentations of results. The activity is supported by the projects DataBio and Bridge2Era as well as CIAOTECH/PNO. All participating teams are invited to join and present their projects. Further Information are available here. Please submit your ideas and projects here.  

Finally, the DBpedia Association is looking forward to meeting you in Leipzig, home of our head office. Pay us a visit!

____

Resources:

[1] Zeus Kerravala; The Success of ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND MACHINE LEARNING Requires an Architectural Approach to Infrastructure. ZK Research: A Division of Kerravala Consulting © 2018 ZK Research, available via http://bit.ly/2UwTJRo

[2] Sören Auer; Statement at the Bundestag during a meeting in AI, Summary is available via https://www.tib.eu/de/service/aktuelles/detail/tib-direktor-als-experte-zu-kuenstlicher-intelligenz-ki-im-deutschen-bundestag/

The post Artificial Intelligence (AI) and DBpedia appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>
Call for Participation – LDK Conference & DBpedia Day https://www.dbpedia.org/blog/call-for-participation-ldk-conference-dbpedia-day/ Sun, 24 Mar 2019 12:40:01 +0000 https://blog.dbpedia.org/?p=1125 With the advent of digital technologies, an ever-increasing amount of language data is now available across various application areas and industry sectors, thus making language data more and more valuable. In that context, we would like to draw your attention to the 2nd Language, Data and Knowledge conference, short LDK conference which will be held in […]

The post Call for Participation – LDK Conference & DBpedia Day appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>
With the advent of digital technologies, an ever-increasing amount of language data is now available across various application areas and industry sectors, thus making language data more and more valuable. In that context, we would like to draw your attention to the 2nd Language, Data and Knowledge conference, short LDK conference which will be held in Leipzig from May 20th till 22nd, 2019.

The Conference

This new biennial conference series aims at bringing together researchers from across disciplines concerned with language data in data science and knowledge-based applications.

Keynote Speakers

We are happy, that Christian Bizer, a founding member of DBpedia, will be one of the three amazing keynote speakers that open the LDK conference. Apart from Christian, Christiane Fellbaum from Princeton University and  Eduart Werner, representative of Leipzig University will share their thoughts on current language data issues to start vital discussions revolving around language data.

Be part of this event in Leipzig and catch up with the latest research outcomes in the areas of acquisition, provenance, representation, maintenance, usability, quality as well as legal, organizational and infrastructure aspects of language data.  

DBpedia Community Meeting

To get the full Leipzig experience, we also like to invite you to our DBpedia Community meeting, which is colocated with LDK and will be held on May, 23rd 2019. Contributions are still welcome. Just in get in touch via dbpedia@infai.org .

We also offer an interesting side-event, the Thinktank and Hackathon “Artificial Intelligence for Smart Agriculture”. Visit our website for further information.

Join LDK conference 2019 and our DBpedia Community Meeting to catch up with the latest research and developments in the Semantic Web Community. 

Yours DBpedia Association

The post Call for Participation – LDK Conference & DBpedia Day appeared first on DBpedia Association.

]]>