AIJul 15, 2022

Knowledge Representation in Digital Agriculture: A Step Towards Standardised Model

arXiv:2207.07740v123 citationsh-index: 39
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of standardizing knowledge representation for efficient decision-making in digital agriculture, with potential extension to other domains, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing ontology and data mining concepts.

The paper tackles the challenge of managing diverse and dynamic knowledge from data mining in agriculture by proposing an ontology-based knowledge map model and system architecture, which has been implemented and proven effective for crop management and monitoring.

In recent years, data science has evolved significantly. Data analysis and mining processes become routines in all sectors of the economy where datasets are available. Vast data repositories have been collected, curated, stored, and used for extracting knowledge. And this is becoming commonplace. Subsequently, we extract a large amount of knowledge, either directly from the data or through experts in the given domain. The challenge now is how to exploit all this large amount of knowledge that is previously known for efficient decision-making processes. Until recently, much of the knowledge gained through a number of years of research is stored in static knowledge bases or ontologies, while more diverse and dynamic knowledge acquired from data mining studies is not centrally and consistently managed. In this research, we propose a novel model called ontology-based knowledge map to represent and store the results (knowledge) of data mining in crop farming to build, maintain, and enrich the process of knowledge discovery. The proposed model consists of six main sets: concepts, attributes, relations, transformations, instances, and states. This model is dynamic and facilitates the access, updates, and exploitation of the knowledge at any time. This paper also proposes an architecture for handling this knowledge-based model. The system architecture includes knowledge modelling, extraction, assessment, publishing, and exploitation. This system has been implemented and used in agriculture for crop management and monitoring. It is proven to be very effective and promising for its extension to other domains.

Foundations

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