What Are Ontologies and How Are They Used in Science?
Virtual (online event)This workshop will explore questions about classification systems and knowledge structures used in scientific disciplines.
Conferences and other events about knowledge graphs, linked data and related topics
While every effort has been made to keep these listings current, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic always check the linked event site for the most up-to-date information concerning that event.
This workshop will explore questions about classification systems and knowledge structures used in scientific disciplines.
The Second International Workshop on Knowledge Graph Construction will have a special focus on knowledge graph construction methods that involve or analyze the roles of users in these processes.
Bite-Sized Taxonomy Boot Camp London will feature three virtual bite-sized taxonomy tutorials.
This tutorial is targeted for developers (in particular of DBpedia Chapters) that wish to learn how to replicate local infrastructure such as loading and hosting an own SPARQL endpoint, and will also address the new DBpedia Stack, which contains several dockerized applications that are automatically loading data from the databus.
The tutorial will introduce the idea of semantic interoperability and the use of ontologies.
The workshop’s goal is to gather researchers and specialists who are engaged in initiatives that cross archives and the semantic web and those planning similar
initiatives in cultural heritage organizations.
The BIBFRAME Workshop in Europe is a forum focused on BIBFRAME implementation.
The 2021 NKOS workshop will explore the potential of Knowledge Organization Systems (KOS) in the context of current developments and possibilities.
The inaugural workshop on Argumentative Knowledge Graphs (ArgKG) will explore the automatic construction of knowledge graphs that encode argumentative knowledge and structures as well as the incorporation of argumentation into factual knowledge graphs, drawing together researchers focusing on natural language processing, automatic knowledge graph construction, and computational analysis of argumentation.
Dr. Janna Hastings and Professor Egon Willighagen will speak about their work on linked data, ontologies and deep learning in science.