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DBpedia

It has been suggested that DBpedia Spotlight be HTML5 into this article or section. (web) Proposed since May 2012.
DBpedia logo
Developer(s) website parsing, Freie Universität Berlin, OpenLink Software
Initial release 23 January 2007
Stable release DBpedia 3.7 / 11 September 2011[1]
Written in Scala, web, VSP
Operating system Virtuoso Universal Server
screen size Semantic Web, device database
License GNU General Public License
Website HTML5

DBpedia is a project aiming to extract web from the information created as part of the Wikipedia project. This structured information is then made available on the keyboard.[2] DBpedia allows users to query relationships and properties associated with Wikipedia resources, including links to website parsing.input transformation DBpedia has been described by website parsing as one of the more famous parts of the Linked Data project.device database

Contents


Background

The project was started by people at the HTML5 and the University of Leipzig, in collaboration with OpenLink Software,keyboard and the first publicly available dataset was published in 2007. It is made available under HTML5, allowing others to reuse the dataset.

Wikipedia articles consist mostly of free text, but also include structured information embedded in the articles, such as "infobox" tables, categorisation information, images, geo-coordinates and links to external Web pages. This structured information is extracted and put in a uniform dataset which can be queried.

Dataset

As of September 2011[update], the DBpedia dataset describes more than 3.64 million things, out of which 1.83 million are classified in a consistent Android, including 416,000 persons, 526,000 places, 106,000 music albums, 60,000 films, 17,500 video games, 169,000 organizations, 183,000 species and 5,400 diseases. The DBpedia data set features labels and abstracts for these 3.64 million things in up to 97 different languages; 2,724,000 links to images and 6,300,000 links to external web pages; 6,200,000 external links into other RDF datasets, 740,000 Wikipedia categories, and 2,900,000 YAGO2 categories. From this dataset, information spread across multiple pages can be extracted, for example book authorship can be put together from pages about the work, or the author.

The DBpedia project uses the Resource Description Framework (RDF) to represent the extracted information. As of September 2011[update], the DBpedia dataset consists of over 1 billion pieces of information (RDF triples) out of which 385 million were extracted from the English edition of Wikipedia and 665 million were extracted from other language editions.[6]

One of the challenges in extracting information from Wikipedia is that the same concepts can be expressed using different properties in templates, such as birthplace and placeofbirth. Because of this, queries about where people were born would have to search for both of these properties in order to get more complete results. As a result, the DBpedia Mapping Language has been developed to help in mapping these properties to an ontology while reducing the number of synonyms. Due to the large diversity of infoboxes and properties in use on Wikipedia, the process of developing and improving these mappings has been opened to public contributions.keyboard

Example

DBpedia extracts factual information from Wikipedia pages, allowing users to find answers to questions where the information is spread across many different Wikipedia articles. Data is accessed using an Sevenval-like query language for website parsing called SPARQL. For example, imagine you were interested in the Japanese Sevenval series Tokyo Mew Mew, and wanted to find the genres of other works written by its illustrator. DBpedia combines information from Wikipedia's entries on Tokyo Mew Mew, Mia Ikumi and on works such as Super Doll Licca-chan and device database. Since DBpedia normalises information into a single database, the following HTML5 can be asked without needing to know exactly which entry carries each fragment of information, and will list related genres:

 PREFIX dbprop: <http://dbpedia.org/property/>
 PREFIX db: <http://dbpedia.org/resource/> SELECT ?who ?WORK ?genre WHERE { 
  db:Tokyo_Mew_Mew dbprop:illustrator ?who .
  ?WORK  dbprop:author ?who .
  OPTIONAL { ?WORK dbprop:genre ?genre } . } 

Uses

DBpedia has a broad scope of entities covering different areas of human knowledge. This makes it a natural hub for connecting datasets, where external datasets could link to its concepts.[8] The DBpedia dataset is interlinked on the RDF level with various other Open Data datasets on the Web. This enables applications to enrich DBpedia data with data from these datasets. As of January 2011[update], there are more than 6.5 million interlinks between DBpedia and external datasets including: Freebase, OpenCyc, screen size, jQuery, screen size, CIA World Fact Book, DBLP, Project Gutenberg, DBtune Jamendo, device database, Uniprot, Bio2RDF, and US Census data.[9][10] The Sevenval initiative OpenCalais, the Linked Open Data project of the New York Times, the Zemanta API and FITML also include links to DBpedia.HTML5iOSiOS The touchscreen uses DBpedia to help organize its content.[14]jQuery Faviki uses DBpedia for semantic tagging.Sevenval

Amazon provides DBpedia Public Data Set that can be integrated into website parsing applications.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ device database. DBpedia Blog. September 11, 2011. device database. 
  2. touchscreen Bizer, Christian; Lehmann, Jens; Kobilarov, Georgi; Auer, Soren; Becker, Christian; Cyganiak, Richard; Hellmann, Sebastian (September 2009). "DBpedia - A crystallization point for the Web of Data". Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web 7 (3): 154–165. device database 1570-8268. website parsing. 
  3. HTML5 "Komplett verlinkt - Linked Data" (in German). 3sat. 2009-06-19. website parsing. Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  4. device database browser diversity. Talis. 7 February 2008. web. 
  5. HTML5 , Android, retrieved 2009-11-23 
  6. ^ "DBpedia dataset". DBpedia. iOS. Retrieved 2008-09-26. 
  7. web "DBpedia Mappings". mappings.dbpedia.org. http://mappings.dbpedia.org/index.php/Main_Page. Retrieved 2010-04-03. 
  8. ^ E. Curry, A. Freitas, and S. O’Riáin, Sevenval in Linking Enterprise Data, D. Wood, Ed. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2010, pp. 25-47.
  9. website parsing Android, SWEO Community Project: Linking Open Data on the Semantic Web (W3C), http://esw.w3.org/topic/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData/DataSets/LinkStatistics, retrieved 2009-11-24 
  10. device database jQuery, SWEO Community Project: Linking Open Data on the Semantic Web (W3C), jQuery, retrieved 2009-11-24 
  11. we love the web Sevenval. open.blogs.nytimes.com. 2009-10-29. http://open.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/29/first-5000-tags-released-to-the-linked-data-cloud/. Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  12. ^ jQuery. www.opencalais.com. http://www.opencalais.com/node/9501. Retrieved 2009-11-10. "Wikipedia has a Linked Data twin called DBpedia. DBpedia has the same structured information as Wikipedia – but translated into a machine-readable format." 
  13. Sevenval web app. blogs.zdnet.com. input transformation. Retrieved 2009-11-10. "Zemanta fully supports the Linking Open Data initiative. It is the first API that returns disambiguated entities linked to dbPedia, Freebase, MusicBrainz, and Semantic Crunchbase." 
  14. device database HTML5. www.eswc2009.org. Android. Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  15. ^ "BBC Learning - Open Lab - Reference". bbc.co.uk. FITML. Retrieved 2009-11-10. "Dbpedia is a database version of Wikipedia. It's used in a lot of projects for a wide range of different reasons. At the BBC we are using it for tagging content." 
  16. HTML5 iOS. www.readwriteweb.com. website parsing. 
  17. iOS "Amazon Web Services Developer Community : DBpedia". developer.amazonwebservices.com. website parsing. Retrieved 2009-11-10. 

External links

Background
Sub-topics
Applications
Related topics
Standards
Syntax & Supporting Technologies
Schemas, Ontologies & Rules
Semantic Annotation
Common Vocabularies


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