186 research outputs found
Integrating descriptions of knowledge management learning activities into large ontological structures: A case study
Ontologies have been recognized as a fundamental infrastructure for advanced approaches to Knowledge Management (KM) automation, and the conceptual foundations for them have been discussed in some previous reports. Nonetheless, such conceptual structures should be properly integrated into existing ontological bases, for the practical purpose of providing the required support for the development of intelligent applications. Such applications should ideally integrate KM concepts into a framework of commonsense knowledge with clear computational semantics. In this paper, such an integration work is illustrated through a concrete case study, using the large OpenCyc knowledge base. Concretely, the main elements of the Holsapple & Joshi KM ontology and some existing work on e-learning ontologies are explicitly linked to OpenCyc definitions, providing a framework for the development of functionalities that use the built-in reasoning services of OpenCyc in KM ctivities. The integration can be used as the point of departure for the engineering of KM-oriented systems that account for a shared understanding of the discipline and rely on public semantics provided by one of the largest open knowledge bases available
Contrasting Knowledge Organization Systems for the Description of Research Products: the Case of Overlapping in the Agricultural Domain
AbstractThe use of Knowledge Organization Systems (KOS) as ontologies or terminologies for the description of scholarly contents requires a careful consideration of the domain and the KOS available. KOS in the same domain may differ in several dimensions including purpose, level of formality, structure and language. In consequence, curators of scientific data face the problem of selecting the relevant KOS, developing mappings when appropriate and deciding on their usage for annotating resources. In domains in which more than a KOS is available, curators need tools to help them in the decision making process. Due to the available heterogeneity of KOS, exploratory tools are required for an initial assessment of overlapping and differences. This paper reports on a practical experience using simple mapping analysis and mapping visualizations in the domain of agriculture. These techniques represent promising directions for the development of decision tools based on the contrast of different KOS metrics
Sentiment analysis of COVID-19 cases in Greece using Twitter data.
Syndromic surveillance with the use of Internet data has been used to track and forecast epidemics
for the last two decades, using different sources from social media to search engine records. More recently,
studies have addressed how the World Wide Web could be used as a valuable source for analysing the reactions of
the public to outbreaks and revealing emotions and sentiment impact from certain events, notably that of
pandemics.
Objective: The objective of this research is to evaluate the capability of Twitter messages (tweets) in estimating the
sentiment impact of COVID-19 cases in Greece in real time as related to cases.
Methods: 153,528 tweets were gathered from 18,730 Twitter users totalling 2,840,024 words for exactly one year
and were examined towards two sentimental lexicons: one in English language translated into Greek (using the
Vader library) and one in Greek. We then used the specific sentimental ranking included in these lexicons to track
i) the positive and negative impact of COVID-19 and ii) six types of sentiments: Surprise, Disgust, Anger, Happiness,
Fear and Sadness and iii) the correlations between real cases of COVID-19 and sentiments and correlations between sentiments and the volume of data.
Results: Surprise (25.32%) mainly and secondly Disgust (19.88%) were found to be the prevailing sentiments of
COVID-19. The correlation coefficient (R2
) for the Vader lexicon is − 0.07454 related to cases and − 0.,70668 to
the tweets, while the other lexicon had 0.167387 and − 0.93095 respectively, all measured at significance level of
p < 0.01. Evidence shows that the sentiment does not correlate with the spread of COVID-19, possibly since the
interest in COVID-19 declined after a certain time
A systematic literature review on Wikidata
To review the current status of research on Wikidata and, in particular, of articles that either describe applications of Wikidata or provide empirical evidence, in order to uncover the topics of interest, the fields that are benefiting from its applications and which researchers and institutions are leading the work
Comparing social media and Google to detect and predict severe epidemics
Internet technologies have demonstrated their value for the early detection and prediction of
epidemics. In diverse cases, electronic surveillance systems can be created by obtaining and analyzing
on-line data, complementing other existing monitoring resources. This paper reports the feasibility
of building such a system with search engine and social network data. Concretely, this study aims at
gathering evidence on which kind of data source leads to better results. Data have been acquired from
the Internet by means of a system which gathered real-time data for 23 weeks. Data on infuenza in
Greece have been collected from Google and Twitter and they have been compared to infuenza data
from the ofcial authority of Europe. The data were analyzed by using two models: the ARIMA model
computed estimations based on weekly sums and a customized approximate model which uses daily
sums. Results indicate that infuenza was successfully monitored during the test period. Google data
show a high Pearson correlation and a relatively low Mean Absolute Percentage Error (R=0.933,
MAPE=21.358). Twitter results are slightly better (R=0.943, MAPE=18.742). The alternative model is
slightly worse than the ARIMA(X) (R=0.863, MAPE=22.614), but with a higher mean deviation (abs.
mean dev: 5.99% vs 4.74%)
A complex network analysis of the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN) package ecosystem
Free and open source software package ecosystems have existed for a long time and are among
the most sophisticated human-made systems. One of the oldest and most popular software package
ecosystems is CRAN, the repository of packages of the statistical language R, which is also one of
the most popular environments for statistical computing nowadays. CRAN stores a large number
of packages that are updated regularly and depend on a number of other packages in a complex
graph of relations; such graph is empirically studied from the perspective of complex network
analysis (CNA) in the current article, showing how network theory and measures proposed by
previous work can help profiling the ecosystem and detecting strengths, good practices and potential
risks in three perspectives: macroscopic properties of the ecosystem (structure and complexity of
the network), microscopic properties of individual packages (represented as nodes), and modular
properties (community detection). Results show how complex network analysis tools can be used
to assess a package ecosystem and, in particular, that of CRAN
Valoración del acogimiento residencial en centros de protección de menores: La vivencia de los jóvenes y sus familias
This investigation seeks to know the level of social integration and the valuation about its experience of minor residential acogimiento that you/they were in resources of protection of the Community of Madrid. The study sample is constituted by 350 cases that were more than two internal years and that they went out with 16 years or more than the protection system between 1994 and 1998.Esta investigación pretende conocer el nivel de integración social y la valoración sobre su experiencia de acogimiento residencial de menores que estuvieron en recursos de protección de la Comunidad de Madrid. La muestra de estudio está constituida por 350 casos que estuvieron más de dos años internos y que salieron con 16 años o más del sistema de protección entre 1994 y 1998
On the graph structure of the Web of Data
This article describes how the Web of Data has emerged as the realization of a machine readable web relying on the resource description framework language as a way to provide richer semantics to datasets. While the web of data is based on similar principles as the original web, being interlinked in the principal mechanism to relate information, the differences in the structure of the information is evident. Several studies have analysed the graph structure of the web, yielding important insights that were used in relevant applications. However, those findings cannot be transposed to the Web of Data, due to fundamental differences in the production, link creation and usage. This article reports on a study of the graph structure of the Web of Data using methods and techniques from similar studies for the Web. Results show that the Web of Data also complies with the theory of the bow-tie. Other characteristics are the low distance between nodes or the closeness and degree centrality are low. Regarding the datasets, the biggest one is Open Data Euskadi but the one with more connections to other datasets is Dbpedia.European Commissio
Aplicación de una metodología híbrida para la enseñanza de la Interacción Persona-Ordenador
En este trabajo se presenta una experiencia de aplicación de una metodología híbrida para la enseñanza de la asignatura optativa Interacción Persona-Ordenador. Se detalla tanto la aplicación del modelo de Kemp para diseño instruccional de la asignatura como los resultados de la experiencia enfocados desde dos aspectos: la evaluación del aprendizaje de los alumnos y la evaluación que los estudiantes han hecho de la metodología
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