- From: Adam Sobieski <adamsobieski@hotmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 25 Jul 2019 19:04:19 +0000
- To: "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CY4PR01MB2775CA7EEACC2E081AD9CE08C5C10@CY4PR01MB2775.prod.exchangelabs.com>
Semantic Web Interest Group, In a recent article of mine, Social Media Bots with Integrated Recommendation Systems for Wisdom Materials drawn from Wiki Corpora (https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/social-media-bots-integrated-recommendation-systems-wisdom-sobieski/), I indicate some modeling and metadata topics pertaining to wiki collections of wisdom materials. Such collections of wisdom materials would advance scholarly and scientific research and make possible a number of new technologies including social media bots with integrated recommendation systems. Some excerpts from the article: “A recent research article of mine, Artificial Wisdom<http://www.phoster.com/artificial-wisdom/>, pertains to search engines and recommendation systems for: anecdotes, proverbs, quotations, lyrics, poetry, narratives (e.g. parables, allegories), and humor. I refer to these materials as wisdom materials.” “Varieties of wisdom materials should be modeled. A wisdom material, for instance, could be described as having one or more interpretations and each interpretation could have text content for indexing, keywords, categories, and so forth.” “Wisdom materials could be secular or non-secular, contemporary or historic. The metadata of wisdom materials and of their interpretations, including, but not limited to, folksonomic categorizations, could support providing a diverse pluralism of materials in corpora. In this way, users could choose and configure social media bots to obtain precisely the wisdom material recommendation services desired.” I hope that the aforementioned article as well as the modeling of and the metadata of wisdom materials were interesting to the group. Best regards, Adam Sobieski http://www.phoster.com/contents/
Received on Thursday, 25 July 2019 19:04:44 UTC