- From: Marieke van Erp <marieke.van.erp@dh.huc.knaw.nl>
- Date: Sun, 21 Nov 2021 17:43:00 +0100
- To: <semantic-web@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAP2ogvG1kL6KqfYxArDs4z3ThhQsRsqDz5uwjK6L9mwo0e=nKg@mail.gmail.com>
* Apologies for cross posting * K-CAP 2021 The Eleventh International Conference on Knowledge Capture December 2 - 3, 2021 A virtual conference https://www.k-cap.org/2021/ * Programme * Join us for two days of presentations at the intersection of knowledge representation, knowledge acquisition, intelligent user interfaces, problem-solving and reasoning, planning, agents, text extraction, and machine learning, information enrichment, visualization, and cyber-infrastructures to foster the publication, retrieval, reuse, and integration of data. K-CAP 2021 has accepted 41 papers, check them out at: https://www.k-cap.org/2021/conference.html * Invited Speakers * Ian Horrocks Oxford University Title: Knowledge Graphs: Theory, Applications and Challenges Abstract: Knowledge Graphs have rapidly become a mainstream technology that combines features of databases and AI. In this talk I will introduce Knowledge Graphs, explaining their features and the theory behind them. I will then consider some of the challenges inherent in both the theory and implementation of Knowledge Graphs and present some solutions that have made possible the development of popular language standards and robust and high-performance Knowledge Graph systems. Finally, I will illustrate the wide applicability of knowledge graph technology with example use cases including configuration management, fraud detection, semantic search & browse, and data wrangling. Leila Zia WIKIMEDIA Foundation Title: Research at the Service of Free Knowledge Abstract: With roughly 20 billion monthly pageviews, 15 million monthly edits, and almost 55 million articles across 300+ languages, Wikipedia has become a canonical part of the Free Knowledge ecosystem: enabling people to have access to knowledge and empowering them to participate in the discourse of gathering and sharing the sum of all human knowledge. By 2030, the Wikimedia projects, which include Wikipedia, aspire to break down the social, political, and technical barriers preventing people from accessing and contributing to free knowledge. In this presentation, I will talk about research in this direction. In particular, I will present our approach and research on identifying, measuring, and bridging Wikipedia's knowledge gaps. I will share some of our success stories, as well as a few of the biggest challenges we face today. I close by sharing some of the open research questions and directions. * Registration* You can now register at: https://www.k-cap.org/2021/registration.html Registration fees: Student Early $50 Late $70 Regular Early $100 Late $120 ACM Member Early $80 Late $100 Early rate applies until 26 November. If you are a student interested in attending K-CAP 2021, you may be eligible to apply for a support grant. This year, grants are funded by the ACM SIGAI. Please take a look at SIGAI's student support opportunities at: https://sigai.acm.org/activities/student_support.html Student Travel Support is also supported by the AIJ. Please apply at the following form: https://forms.gle/vZ5Bdvg7Vj12RaUq9.
Received on Sunday, 21 November 2021 16:43:31 UTC