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The Dream of a Global Network of Knowledge

The Dream of a Global Network of Knowledge. Martin Doerr. Center for Cultural Informatics Institute of Computer Science Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas. Amsterdam, Netherlands November 17, 2011. Introduction. Digital Libraries take on different forms and roles.

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The Dream of a Global Network of Knowledge

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  1. The Dream of a Global Network of Knowledge Martin Doerr Center for Cultural Informatics Institute of Computer Science Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas Amsterdam, Netherlands November 17, 2011

  2. Introduction Digital Libraries take on different forms and roles. • Initially collection management systems, • literature collections, • digitized resources • resource libraries (Perseus etc), on-line corpora • In addition, data services • scientific data collections • research systems (e.g., GIS integrated data) • “Metadata” Aggregation Services: a new paradigm using semantic networks • integrate diverse forms of information assets and pointers to them for the support of research and interested public • New grand challenges Library access paradigm still dominates!

  3. Library, Archive, Museum Information • The typical library contents: “The whole stories”, access widely solved! • Primary literature:Fiction. • Categorical: theories and hypotheses • Secondary literature (research results) • Facts brought into causal context • The typical museum information: “Museum objects rarely talk” • Factualdocumentation of properties and context per object, references, classification • Highly heterogeneous, • About things taken out of original context, distributed over the world

  4. Library, Archive, Museum Information • The typical archive contents: “The needle in the haystack” • Primary sources, “bits and pieces”(letters, legal documents, administration acts, images, scientific records). • factual, kept in the contextual sequence of creation, as by the creator or responsible. • kept due to mandate related to functions. • Similarly, library content itself: “What is in the book?” • parts of book content (citations!) as primary source of investigation • access: not much more than keyword search, if a digital form exists…

  5. Epistemology of Integration exhibit Libraries Museums publish document features & context provide finding aids illustrate, exemplify using are about Books refer to Objects, Sites contain narratives made from pub lish refer to document manage provide finding aids Archives SMRs primary Documents

  6. Traditional Information Access The traditional library task: • Collect and preserve documents and provide finding aids • The job is solved, when the (one, best) document is handed out. “All you want is in this document”. The digital analogue: implementing “finding aids”: • Assumption: User knows a topic, characterized by a noun, or knows associations of a thing he knows it exists. Associations may be known properties, but not directly correlated to the problem to be solved (e.g. “organic farming” for “host-parasite studies”.) • Semantic interoperability is limited to the aggregation task: Metadata are mainly homogeneous (DC, VRA, etc.), the only challenge discussed is the matching of terminologies (KOS). …still THE dominant global information integration paradigm

  7. Problems • No support to learn from the aggregated sources, to retrieve by contexts, • e.g., Who was the employer of Donald Johanson when he found Lucy? • e.g., Which plant species are documented for the Black Sea coast for 6000 BC? (Critical climate hypothesis connected to detecting the Black Sea flood in 5600 BC) • e.g., Which resolution had Galileo’s telescope when he observed... • But understanding lives from relationships. Cultural information has complex relationships. Relationships may be categorical or factual: • Categorical (e.g., “smoking causes cancer”). : Richly exploited by Semantic Web technology. Use and integration limited to research results. Not useful for primary research itself. • Factual associations concatenate information assets to meaningful (“epistemic”) networks (“stories”): support context-based hypothesis building, cross-disciplinary search etc. (e.g. “John smoked with 20”, …30.. 40”. “John had lung cancer with 60”) • Knowledge of Factual associations is the “food” of scholarly research

  8. What Can IT Do Now? • Access to categorical knowledge is well solved, if hypotheses have names: subject search, keyword search. • content management systems & search engines • Increasing account of structured categorical knowledge built in form of thesauri, ontologies (life sciences!) • access by terms and browsing broader/narrower terms • access by categorical relationships more rarely touched • Access to facts is idiosyncratic to diverse systems and limited to: • structured data services – no general access paradigm • KOS(authors lists, gazetteers) • “surfingand browsing” on the Internet or in Digital Libraries

  9. What Can IT Do Now? • New promises: Semantic Networks, Semantic Web • RDF Triple Stores • Open World Systems: Billions of facts under any number of schemata in one database • Linked Open Data (LoD): Thousands of triple stores to be accessed • Shift to metadata rich of facts • from Archives, Libraries, Museums, Digital Libraries • from research databases -> difference of data and metadata blurs • A global network of knowledge ?... or a perfect intellectual chaos…?

  10. Semantic Networks “…noble simplicity, silent grandeur…” (in a library) Winkelmann’s death time “LAOKOON” (copy) (in Vatican museum) Winkelmann writes…. Winkelmann Winkelmann sees “Laokoon” 1755 (archive information?) unknown Roman Winkelmann’s mother “LAOKOON” Winkelmann’s birth (archive information?) unknown Roman copies “Laokoon” Published Inference (in a library?) space Rome Germany Greece

  11. 3 Grand Challenges • We need a rich, integrating global schema– a core and extensions of any depth • Con: impossible – everybody has his own conceptualization • Pro: CIDOC-FRBR work empirically proves opposite • “Knitting” the network : without co-ref resolution facts/triples do not connect • Con: impossible – automatic means limited, human labor not scalable • Pro or Con?: LoD • Pro: Human labor scales if massively organized • End-users need to query effectively large Triple Stores • Con: impossible to write ad hoc rich SPARQL statements, impossible to memorize hundreds of properties • Pro: use another, simple global schema for querying

  12. A Global Schema: The CIDOC CRM • Developed by the CRM Special Interest Group of the International Committee for Documentation (CIDOC) of the International Council of Museums (ICOM) • Is an extensible core ontology of 86 classes and 137 properties describing the underlying semantics of over a hundred database schemata and structures from all museum disciplines, archives and libraries, • Extended by FRBROO, modeling IFLA’s FRBR, and soon FRSAD,FRAD, (RDFS integration with DC, Europeana EDM, ORE exists) • It is result of 15 years interdisciplinary work and agreement. • In essence, it is a generic model of recording of “what has happened” in human scale, i.e. a class of discourse. • By it we can generate huge, meaningful networks of knowledge by a simple abstraction: history as meetings of people, things and information. • An interlingua to transform, transport and merge information from most data structures with clear meaning.

  13. E52 Time-Span E53 Place E39 Actor 7012124 E38 Image E31 Document “Yalta Agreement” E52 Time-Span E39 Actor E39 Actor 1945-02-11 Explicit Events, Object Identity, Symmetry February 1945 P82 at some time within P7 took place at P11 participated in E7 Activity “Crimea Conference” P86 falls within P67 is referred to by E65 Creation Event * P81 ongoing throughout P14 performed P94 has created

  14. TGN data Data example (RDF-like form) Epitaphios GE34604 (entity E22 Man-Made Object) P30 custody transferredthrough, P24 changed ownership through Transfer of Epitaphios GE34604 (entity E10 Transfer of Custody, E8 Acquisition Event) P28 custody surrendered by Metropolitan Church of the Greek Community of Ankara (entity E39 Actor) P23 transferred title from Metropolitan Church of the Greek Community of Ankara (entity E39 Actor) P29 custody received by Museum Benaki (entity E39 Actor) P22 transferred title to Exchangeable Fund of Refugees (entity E40 Legal Body) P2 has type national foundation (entity E55 Type) P14 carried out by Exchangeable Fund of Refugees (entity E39 Actor) P4 has time-span GE34604_transfer_time (entity E52 Time-Span) P82 at some time within 1923 – 1928 (entity E61 Time Primitive) P7 took place at Greece (entity E53 Place) P2 has type nation (entity E55 Type) republic (entity E55 Type) P89 falls within Europe (entity E53 Place) P2 has type continent (entity E55 Type) Multiple Instantiation

  15. refer to / refine affect or / refer to participate in location E52 Time-Spans E53 Places CRM Top-level classes useful for integration E55 Types E28 Conceptual Objects E41 Appellations E39 Actors refer to / identify E18 Physical Thing E2 Temporal Entities at within

  16. The CIDOC CRM The types of relationships • Identification of real world items by real world names • ObservationandClassification of real world items • Part-decompositionand structural propertiesof Conceptual & Physical Objects, Periods, Actors, Places and Times • Participation of persistent items in temporal entities • creates a notion of history: “world-lines” meeting in space-time • Locationof periods in space-time and physical objects in space • Influenceof objects on activities and products and vice-versa • Referenceof information objects to any real-world item

  17. The Hierarchy of Participation Properties P33 used specific technique (was used by) P16 used specific object (was used for) P142 used constituent (was used in) P146 separated from (lost member by) P29 custody received by (received custody through) P96 by mother (gave birth) P25 moved (moved by) P22 transferred title to (acquired title through) P14 carried out by (performed) P23 transferred title from (surrendered title through) P143 joined (was joined by) P28 custody surrendered by (surrendered custody through) P145 separated (left by) P11 had participant (participated in) P144 joined with (gained member by) P99 dissolved (was dissolved by) P12 occurred in the presence of (was present at) P13 destroyed (was destroyed by) P93 took out of existence (was taken out of existence by) P124 transformed (was transformed by) P100 was death of (died in) P112 diminished (was diminished by) P31 has modified (was modified by) P110 augmented (was augmented by) P108 has produced (was produced by) P123 resulted in (resulted from) P95 has formed (was formed by) P92 brought into existence (was brought into existence by) Generalization P98 brought into life (was born) P94 has created (was created by) P135 created type (was created by)

  18. Dublin Core CDWA MIDAS Data Schema Integration by Property Generalization CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (CRM) Access all data from any level by CRMproperty generalization Few concepts, high recall Thing Actor was present at Event happened at Special concepts, high precision Acquisition used object automatic data export

  19. Knitting the Network: Extracted Relations & Co-reference Linking documents via co-reference, not hyperlinks! Time- Span Primary link extracted from one document Thing Event Actor CRM: global classification of relationships Deductions Place Fact Integration Discovery of Lucy Johanson's Expedition AL 288-1 Donald Johanson Lucy Hadar Ethiopia Cleveland Museum of Natural History Fact Extraction Documents, Data, Metadata 19

  20. Co-reference Knowledge and Reality symbolic level (“vocabulary”) same as (data comparison) same as not same as (direct negotiation) (direct negotiation) interpretion (“speakers”) real world (“objects”) M.Smith born 2-5-65 M.Smith born 2-5-65

  21. Theory of Co-reference • A group of “speakers”(a database)” shares unique identifiers for a set of things. Another group “matches” their identifiers to mean the “same as”. • The transitive closure of “same as” – “not same as” exhibits “impossibleworlds”, the only indication of false knowledge at the data level. • Ultimate knowledge is what the author meant by “her/him/it” – a part-of-speech, a database key, an occurrence of a name or URI. • Co-reference is primary knowledge, true research, not a “cleaning” issue. • Co-reference is more fundamental than schema integration: Supports integration without schema. Schema integration can be seen as co-reference problem. • Co-reference is more fundamental than Reference KOS: Nodescription elements are needed. Reference KOS can help co-reference. Co-reference can be distributed! • Automatic “duplicate detection” is based on/ improved by co-reference, • “Negotiation with the speakers” is the ultimate confirmation = scholarly research.

  22. 1. query 2. query Co-reference Problem Query “Friends of a Friend” Content Read output: find “Kostas”, guess “Κώστας” has friend “Kostas” input: “Martin” Source 1 Content has friend input: “Κώστας” “Κώστας” output: “George” Source 2

  23. query Co-reference via Authority Join across sources by transitivity of co-reference first match local ids Content Authority service . . . . resulting link input: “Martin” ids L i n k t a b l e “Κώστας” / “Kostas” match Source 1 friend-of-a-friend . . . . local ids Content . . . . second match output: “George” Source 2

  24. query Curating Co-reference without Authority Join across sources by transitivity of co-reference local ids Content make a co-reference local ids . . . . input: “Martin” “Κώστας” / “Kostas” match . . . . Source 1 friend-of-a-friend local ids make a co-reference Content . . . . output: “George” Source 2

  25. Managing Co-reference Clusters explicit initial “same as” (n-1) explicit redundant “same as” New link connecting clusters ! implicit link ( n(n-1)/2 ) reference occurrence What happens ? “M. Dörr” “M. Doerr” Authority files are good “attractors” of co-reference links, but do not solve co-reference !

  26. A New Service: Global Co-reference Indices • Co-reference links should be persistent and public. Primary Co-reference links should be curated and preserved in local databases: “co-reference indices”. • Use NER and duplicate-detection algorithms to prepopulate co-reference indices. Use appropriate belief values for generated data. • Automated, global, distributed consistency control services are feasible. • Co-reference indices are much larger than ontologies, but not larger than search engines. • Mobilize general users and domain experts to enhance and verify co-reference information by social tagging to scale-up human labor and precision. • Install global supervision by open consortia setting the rules and doing central services. • Then the network may converge to consistent global knowledge. Linked Open Data has no co-reference concept so-far.It will lead toa proliferation of URIs.

  27. Last Problem: How to query 250 properties? • Humans think consciously in “compressed relations” (G.Fauconnier “The Way We Think”), in particular omitting events: “What do we have from New Guinea?” • There are a few “Fundamental Categories” that partition our concepts (Ranganathan, “Who, When, Where, What..) and disambiguate most words e.g., a “”museum” is a “who”, a “where” or a “what” • If we implement a simple semantic network with few compressed relationships, we cannot integrate knowledge, because the intermediates are missing, and we cannot manage the immense number of redundantrelations • If we implement a CIDOC CRM network, end-users cannot write queries Solution: • Define a new “datamodel” of “Fundamental Categories” and “Fundamental Relationships” forquerying only! • implemented as automated deductions from a CRM-based network

  28. How to query with 250 properties? • Fundamental Categories: • Thing, Actor, Time, Place, Event (E2), Type • Fundamental Relationships: • has type /is type of • is similar to or same with • is part of (is member of) / has part (has member) • has met • from (has founder or has parent) / is origin, founder, parent, provider or creator of • had (=owns, keeps) / were owned/kept by • at • refers to or is about / is referred by/ is referred to at • Relationships change interpretation depending on category of domain and range.

  29. Following this schema, we have implemented over a hundred deductions such as: Thing-> P130F.shows_features_of (0,n) OR P130B.features_are_also_found_on (0,n) -> { E24.Physical_Man-Made_Thing ->P62F.depicts -> Thing OR E24.Physical_Man-Made_Thing ->P128F.carries(0,n)-> E73.Information Object ->P67F.refers_to-> Thing OR D1.Digital_Object -> {L11B.was_output_of ->D3.Formal_Derivation -> L10F.had_input -> D1.Digital_Object ->}(0,n)L11B.was_output_of -> { D7.Digital_Machine_Event -> P9B.forms_part_of(0,n)->}(0,1)D2.Digitization_Process -> L1F.digitized -> E18.Physical_Thing } It works!!! Thing is about Thing Path Expression

  30. Conclusions After 50 Years of “Artificial Intelligence” research and 15 years “Semantic Web”, the Global Network of Knowledge is still a dream. Today, we have the chance to lay foundations for global knowledge network(s!) with • a limited consistency, • with a tendency to converge to something more consistent • a limited common language, • a limited way to globally explore deep relationships For that, we have to • Overcome intellectual barriers in conceptual modelling (“quick & dirty”, W3C “beliefs”, ignoring empirical scientific methods, political thinking, domain blindness) • Organize domain communities to curatecollectively data and co-reference by new awarding methods • Invest in technology and methodology for a long data life-cycle by mapping, and transforming data “for ever”, as we do since antiquity…

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