Manuel Prinz

2papers

2 Papers

DBApr 8, 2025
Rosetta Statements: Simplifying FAIR Knowledge Graph Construction with a User-Centered Approach

Lars Vogt, Kheir Eddine Farfar, Pallavi Karanth et al.

Machines need data and metadata to be machine-actionable and FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable) to manage increasing data volumes. Knowledge graphs and ontologies are key to this, but their use is hampered by high access barriers due to required prior knowledge in semantics and data modelling. The Rosetta Statement approach proposes modeling English natural language statements instead of a mind-independent reality. We propose a metamodel for creating semantic schema patterns for simple statement types. The approach supports versioning of statements and provides a detailed editing history. Each Rosetta Statement pattern has a dynamic label for displaying statements as natural language sentences. Implemented in the Open Research Knowledge Graph (ORKG) as a use case, this approach allows domain experts to define data schema patterns without needing semantic knowledge. Future plans include combining Rosetta Statements with semantic units to organize ORKG into meaningful subgraphs, improving usability. A search interface for querying statements without needing SPARQL or Cypher knowledge is also planned, along with tools for data entry and display using Large Language Models. The Rosetta Statement metamodel supports a three-step knowledge graph construction procedure. Domain experts can model semantic content without support from ontology engineers by using Wikidata, lowering entry barriers and increasing cognitive interoperability. The second level involves mapping Wikidata terms to established ontologies, and the third step developing semantic graph patterns for reasoning, requiring collaboration with ontology engineers.

DLJan 30, 2019
Open Research Knowledge Graph: Next Generation Infrastructure for Semantic Scholarly Knowledge

Mohamad Yaser Jaradeh, Allard Oelen, Kheir Eddine Farfar et al.

Despite improved digital access to scholarly knowledge in recent decades, scholarly communication remains exclusively document-based. In this form, scholarly knowledge is hard to process automatically. In this paper, we present the first steps towards a knowledge graph based infrastructure that acquires scholarly knowledge in machine actionable form thus enabling new possibilities for scholarly knowledge curation, publication and processing. The primary contribution is to present, evaluate and discuss multi-modal scholarly knowledge acquisition, combining crowdsourced and automated techniques. We present the results of the first user evaluation of the infrastructure with the participants of a recent international conference. Results suggest that users were intrigued by the novelty of the proposed infrastructure and by the possibilities for innovative scholarly knowledge processing it could enable.