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Natural interfaces to large knowledge structures have the potential to impact science, education and business to an extent comparable to the WWW. We are already seeing the first wave of this in consumer services such as Siri, Cortana and Alexa. But these services are limited in their scope of knowledge, not open to direct access or contributors beyond their corporate firewalls, and can only answer relatively limited questions in their business areas. We now have the technology and know how to expand to thousands of new topic areas and many more useful classes of questions, if we mount an open effort to build a national or international knowledge graph.
The architecture should allow people to encode knowledge for their topics of interest and be able to hook them into the larger network, without having to go through gatekeepers (such as Google or Apple).
Once this knowledge is encoded, access to this should not be restricted to a small priesthood of SQL or other programmatic interface users. There will be a wide range of interfaces, including natural language interfaces, graphical interfaces and visualizations which no one has even invented yet. Developers will be able to independently create more sophisticated programs for answering queries, providing summaries that help regular people make decisions in their lives.
This talk will summarize a discussion between a set of academics, internet companies and government agencies and go through the questions of "why now", "haven't we all tried this before", "what are the first steps the nation could take here", and "what exactly is it that we're proposing here?"
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
孙明明推荐
TOKeN(Open Knowledge Network) 这个项目处于筹备期,网上资料不多,刚开过第一次会议。不了解的朋友可以看看发起人的一个报告 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2cEUKKJoAdU
更正式的文档。 https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KQaBKCo_e9ku5udZLxThhi8vS_fU8m9ne9Ac2sagUxw/edit
相关资料
http://halley.exp.sis.pitt.edu/comet/presentColloquium.do?col_id=11102
Natural interfaces to large knowledge structures have the potential to impact science, education and business to an extent comparable to the WWW. We are already seeing the first wave of this in consumer services such as Siri, Cortana and Alexa. But these services are limited in their scope of knowledge, not open to direct access or contributors beyond their corporate firewalls, and can only answer relatively limited questions in their business areas. We now have the technology and know how to expand to thousands of new topic areas and many more useful classes of questions, if we mount an open effort to build a national or international knowledge graph.
The architecture should allow people to encode knowledge for their topics of interest and be able to hook them into the larger network, without having to go through gatekeepers (such as Google or Apple).
Once this knowledge is encoded, access to this should not be restricted to a small priesthood of SQL or other programmatic interface users. There will be a wide range of interfaces, including natural language interfaces, graphical interfaces and visualizations which no one has even invented yet. Developers will be able to independently create more sophisticated programs for answering queries, providing summaries that help regular people make decisions in their lives.
This talk will summarize a discussion between a set of academics, internet companies and government agencies and go through the questions of "why now", "haven't we all tried this before", "what are the first steps the nation could take here", and "what exactly is it that we're proposing here?"
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: