167,346 research outputs found
Semi-automatic annotation process for procedural texts: An application on cooking recipes
Taaable is a case-based reasoning system that adapts cooking recipes to user
constraints. Within it, the preparation part of recipes is formalised as a
graph. This graph is a semantic representation of the sequence of instructions
composing the cooking process and is used to compute the procedure adaptation,
conjointly with the textual adaptation. It is composed of cooking actions and
ingredients, among others, represented as vertices, and semantic relations
between those, shown as arcs, and is built automatically thanks to natural
language processing. The results of the automatic annotation process is often a
disconnected graph, representing an incomplete annotation, or may contain
errors. Therefore, a validating and correcting step is required. In this paper,
we present an existing graphic tool named \kcatos, conceived for representing
and editing decision trees, and show how it has been adapted and integrated in
WikiTaaable, the semantic wiki in which the knowledge used by Taaable is
stored. This interface provides the wiki users with a way to correct the case
representation of the cooking process, improving at the same time the quality
of the knowledge about cooking procedures stored in WikiTaaable
Semi-automatic annotation process for procedural texts: An application on cooking recipes
International audienceTaaable is a case-based reasoning system that adapts cooking recipes to user constraints. Within it, the preparation part of recipes is formalised as a graph. This graph is a semantic representation of the sequence of instructions composing the cooking process and is used to compute the procedure adaptation, conjointly with the textual adaptation. It is composed of cooking actions and ingredients, among others, represented as vertices, and semantic relations between those, shown as arcs, and is built automatically thanks to natural language processing. The results of the automatic annotation process is often a disconnected graph, representing an incomplete annotation, or may contain errors. Therefore, a validating and correcting step is required. In this paper, we present an existing graphic tool named \kcatos, conceived for representing and editing decision trees, and show how it has been adapted and integrated in WikiTaaable, the semantic wiki in which the knowledge used by Taaable is stored. This interface provides the wiki users with a way to correct the case representation of the cooking process, improving at the same time the quality of the knowledge about cooking procedures stored in WikiTaaable
Ontology: A Linked Data Hub for Mathematics
In this paper, we present an ontology of mathematical knowledge concepts that
covers a wide range of the fields of mathematics and introduces a balanced
representation between comprehensive and sensible models. We demonstrate the
applications of this representation in information extraction, semantic search,
and education. We argue that the ontology can be a core of future integration
of math-aware data sets in the Web of Data and, therefore, provide mappings
onto relevant datasets, such as DBpedia and ScienceWISE.Comment: 15 pages, 6 images, 1 table, Knowledge Engineering and the Semantic
Web - 5th International Conferenc
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A platform for semantic web studies
The Semantic Web can be seen as a large, heterogeneous network of ontologies and semantic documents. Characterizing these ontologies, the way they relate and the way they are organized can help in better understanding how knowledge is produced and published online. It also provides new ways to explore and exploit this large collection of ontologies. In this paper, we present the foundation of a research platform for characterizing the Semantic Web, relying on the collection of ontologies and the functionalities provided by the Watson Semantic Web search engine. We more specifically focus on formalizing and monitoring relationships between ontologies online, considering a variety of different relations (similarity, versioning, agreement, modularity) and how they can help us obtaining meaningful overviews of the current state of the Semantic Web
A Computational Model of Children's Semantic Memory
A computational model of children's semantic memory is built from the Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) of a multisource child corpus. Three tests of the model are described, simulating a vocabulary test, an association test and a recall task. For each one, results from experiments with children are presented and compared to the model data. Adequacy is correct, which means that this simulation of children's semantic memory can be used to simulate a variety of children's cognitive processes
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