AIDBMar 2, 2020

Knowledge Graphs on the Web -- an Overview

arXiv:2003.00719v377 citations
AI Analysis

This is an incremental overview for researchers and practitioners interested in knowledge representation on the web.

The paper provides an overview and comparison of publicly available knowledge graphs, such as DBpedia and Wikidata, analyzing their contents, size, coverage, and overlap.

Knowledge Graphs are an emerging form of knowledge representation. While Google coined the term Knowledge Graph first and promoted it as a means to improve their search results, they are used in many applications today. In a knowledge graph, entities in the real world and/or a business domain (e.g., people, places, or events) are represented as nodes, which are connected by edges representing the relations between those entities. While companies such as Google, Microsoft, and Facebook have their own, non-public knowledge graphs, there is also a larger body of publicly available knowledge graphs, such as DBpedia or Wikidata. In this chapter, we provide an overview and comparison of those publicly available knowledge graphs, and give insights into their contents, size, coverage, and overlap.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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