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CS 520: Knowledge Graphs
CS 520: Knowledge Graphs
Knowledge graphs have emerged as a compelling abstraction for organizing world's structured knowledge over the internet, capturing relationships among key entities of interest to enterprises, and a way to integrate information extracted from multiple data sources. Knowledge graphs have also started to play a central role in machine learning and natural language processing as a method to incorporate world knowledge, as a target knowledge representation for extracted knowledge, and for explaining what is being learned. This class is a graduate level research seminar featuring prominent researchers and industry practitioners working on different aspects of knowledge graphs. It will showcase how latest research in AI, database systems and HCI is coming together in integrated intelligent systems centered around knowledge graphs.The seminar will be offered over Zoom as per the planned schedule.The seminar is open to public. Remote participants may join the seminar through Zoom. To be
·web.stanford.edu·
CS 520: Knowledge Graphs
Do Graph Databases Scale? - DZone Big Data
Do Graph Databases Scale? - DZone Big Data
Graph Databases are a great solution for many modern use cases: Fraud Detection, Knowledge Graphs, Asset Management, Recommendation Engines, IoT, Permission Management … you name it.  All such projects benefit from a database technology capable of analyzing highly connected data points and their relations fast – Graph databases are designed for these tasks. But the nature of graph data poses challenges when it comes to *buzzword alert* scalability. So why is this, and are graph databases capable of scaling? Let’s see... In the following, we will define what we mean by scaling, take a closer look at two challenges potentially hindering scaling with graph databases, and discuss solutions currently available. What Is the “Scalability of Graph Databases”? Let’s quickly define what we mean here by scaling, as it is not “just” putting more data on one machine or throwing it on various ones. What you want when working with large or growing datasets is also an acceptabl
·dzone.com·
Do Graph Databases Scale? - DZone Big Data
Extracting Synonyms from Knowledge Graphs
Extracting Synonyms from Knowledge Graphs
based search systems do not reflect the semantics of individual input words of search queries. For example, a query for the word “house” would not return records for the words “building” or “real estate”. How can such relationships be represented in a technical system? One approach is to include synonyms. Search engines like Elasticsearch provide methods to integrate synonym lists. However, a list of synonyms itself is required for configuration.
·dice-research.org·
Extracting Synonyms from Knowledge Graphs
Global Graph Database Market Size, Prospects, Growth Trends, Key Trend, Future Expectations and Forecast from 2019 to 2025 – Express Press Release Distribution
Global Graph Database Market Size, Prospects, Growth Trends, Key Trend, Future Expectations and Forecast from 2019 to 2025 – Express Press Release Distribution
Albany, US, 2019-Jan-23 — /EPR Network/ —Market Research Hub (MRH) has actively included a new research study titled “Global Graph Database Market” Size
·express-press-release.net·
Global Graph Database Market Size, Prospects, Growth Trends, Key Trend, Future Expectations and Forecast from 2019 to 2025 – Express Press Release Distribution
Graph data modelling - inferred vs explicit categories and labels – pablissimo.com
Graph data modelling - inferred vs explicit categories and labels – pablissimo.com
When building graph data models we frequently have to deal with a degree of polymorphism for our entities just like the real world. For instance – I’m a person, but I’m also a parent, a spouse, a sibling, a child, a… Implicit categorisation Sometimes the entity categories are entirely defined by relationships to other entities. […]
·pablissimo.com·
Graph data modelling - inferred vs explicit categories and labels – pablissimo.com
Graph Database vs. Document Database: Different Levels of Abstraction - DATAVERSITY
Graph Database vs. Document Database: Different Levels of Abstraction - DATAVERSITY
Graph databases and document databases make up a subcategory of non-relational databases or NoSQL. NoSQL databases were created to get a handle on large amounts of messy Big Data, moving very quickly. Managers use the non-relational toolkit to gain business insights and detect patterns in information on the fly, as Big Data streams into the system. Many companies, especially those with a large web presence like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, consider NoSQL databases a must-have.
·dataversity.net·
Graph Database vs. Document Database: Different Levels of Abstraction - DATAVERSITY
Graph Databases: The Key to Groundbreaking Medical Research
Graph Databases: The Key to Groundbreaking Medical Research
Neo4j’s Alicia Frame explains how life science researchers can exploit graph databases to get truly granular insight into big data to make major leaps forward in medical research.Complex data sets hold the key to advancing medical breakthroughs. These data sets tend to be voluminous and heterogeneous by nature, presenting an insurmountable challenge for traditional data analysis methods as they struggle to link patterns and outcomes. The unfortunate consequence is a slowdown in the progress of research.Anyone who works in life sciences is aware that they are working with highly connected information; the challenge is making sense of these connections. Unfortunately, many scientists are still using relational databases and spreadsheets which makes mapping important patterns and connections unintuitive and difficult, if not impossible.Graph technologyGraph technology is emerging as an enabler for researchers to trawl gargantuan amounts of unstructured data, turning it into valuab
·pharmafield.co.uk·
Graph Databases: The Key to Groundbreaking Medical Research