Events

1st DBpedia Community Meeting – Amsterdam 2014

Date:
January 30, 2014
Time:
9:00 am CET
Address:
VU Amsterdam
Amsterdam
Netherlands

Basic Plans

Twitter : #DBpediaAmsterdam

The DBpedia Project in 2014: from a hosted data set to a public data infrastructure for the Web of Data. As the DBpedia community has grown extensively, we think that the time has come to get everybody in one large room and meet. We hope to get together three major groups involved in DBpedia: the DBpedia developers and maintainers, the communities of the individual DBpedia language chapters, and, of course, the DBpedia users. The meeting will be held at VU Amsterdam on Jan 30th and is co-located with the PiLOD 2.0 meeting one day earlier. The first session will be a discussion about the DBpedia State-of-Play, where core members of the DBpedia community present certain aspects of DBpedia and the audience is invited to give feedback and ask questions. The second session will be dedicated to users of DBpedia. We would like to invite companies, organisations, and other project to briefly present their use cases for DBpedia and give input on how we can improve DBpedia for users. Free slots still available, apply here.

After the lunch, we plan to have three break-out sessions for the topics (1) DBpedia and Library, (2) Linking text to LOD entities, and (3) What is wrong with DBpedia? Developers discussion on how to improve our baby. Finally, the last parallel sessions are planned as: DBpedia tutorial, DBpedia I18N developers’ session, and a Local Dutch DBpedia Chapter Meeting, with the additional possibility to continue break out sessions.

About DBpedia

(Source: Semantic Web Journal article)
The DBpedia community project extracts structured, multilingual knowledge from Wikipedia and makes it freely available using Semantic Web and Linked Data standards. The extracted knowledge, comprising more than 1.8 billion facts, is structured according to an ontology maintained by the community. The knowledge is obtained from different Wikipedia language editions, thus covering more than 100 languages, and mapped to the community ontology. The resulting data sets are linked to more than 30 other data sets in the Linked Open Data (LOD) cloud. The DBpedia project was started in 2006 and has since attracted large interest in research and practice. A central part of the LOD cloud, it serves as a connection hub for other data sets. For the research community, DBpedia provides a testbed serving real world data spanning many domains and languages. Due to the continuous growth of Wikipedia, DBpedia also provides an increasing added value for data acquisition, re-use, and integration tasks within organisations. In this system report, we give an overview over the DBpedia community project, including its architecture, technical implementation, maintenance, internationalisation, and usage statistics, and showcase some popular DBpedia applications.

Travel Grants / Sponsorship

Some of the DBpedia developers work on DBpedia in their free-time and will not have institutional funding to come to the meeting. Therefore, we are still looking for sponsors for travel grants (as well as coffee and food for the sessions). If you are interested in sponsoring this meeting, please email our sponsorship chair to request more information.

Participants can apply for a travel grant by filling out a form or emailing Sebastian (who will fill out the same form on your behalf 😉 ). Assuming we acquire a sponsor, these grants will be awarded depending on community activity (i.e., Google Summer of Code participation, Git Commits to DBpedia framework, activity on the mailing lists, etc.) and standing.

Quick Facts

Web URL: http://wiki.dbpedia.org/meetings/Amsterdam2014
When: January 30th, 2014
Where: VU Amsterdam, Netherlands ( behind the high main building, nr 6 on the map )
Host: Dutch DBpedia Chapter (http://nl.dbpedia.org) and the VU Amsterdam
Call for Contribution: Submission Open http://tinyurl.com/DBpedia-amsterdam-2014
Registration: see below
Co-located with the ~PiLOD 2.0 meeting on January 29th, 2014

Acknowledgements

Succesvolle samenwerking Specialisterren en Stichting Bibliotheek.nl (BNL)  | Specialisterren - De beste testers We would especially like to thank Bibliotheek.nl – Public Libraries of the Netherlands for supporting the Dutch DBpedia Chapter.
Koninklijke Bibliotheek – National library of the Netherlands for supporting the Dutch DBpedia Chapter and providing coffee, lunch, and drinks for the meeting.
Semantic Web Company for providing coffee, lunch, and drinks for the meeting
Institute for Applied Informatics
VU Amsterdam kindly provided the facilities for the meeting, with special thanks to Lora Aroyo from BiographyNet
OpenLink Software for continuous hosting of the main DBpedia Endpoint

Organisation

Participants and Registration

You can register by adding yourself here or send an email to one of the organizers. Registration is free.
See all the people attending the meeting. If you can’t find your name in there you can add it here, and it will show up after a while (30 min or more).

Location / Venue

The meeting will be held in the VU Amsterdam University in Netherlands.
We will use the Medical Faculty building ( behind the high main building, nr 6 on the map ) and the following rooms: MF-G613, MF-A311, MF-A301, MD-B034

Schedule

8:30 Registration in front of MF-G613
9:00 Session 1 DBpedia State of Play, Room: MF-G613 Session 1 Notepad
Welcome by Enno Meijers from the Dutch DBpedia Chapter (see video)
From a Hosted Data Set to a Public Data Infrastructure for the Web of Data, Sebastian Hellmann (see video), more information on the talk about the DBpedia Data stack
DBpedia Internationalisation (PDF), Dimitris Kontokostas, The current state of the DBpedia internationalization effort, local DBpedia chapters and future challenges (see video)
DBpedia hosting & usage statistics by Patrick van Kleef from OpenLink Software (see video)
Wikidata and DBpedia, Gerard Meijssen from Wikidata. So far Wikidata and DBpedia have been rather stand offish, even though they have so much in common. What I want to do is present the current state of Wikidata and indicate its challenges. Many of these challenges have been met by DBpedia. I want to discuss how the two projects can mutually benefit from their activities. (see video)
DBpedia Spotlight: Overview and Challenges (PDF), Joachim Daiber (see video)
DBpedia-based applications developed from the DBpedia Greek chapter, Charalampos Bratsas, from the Greek DBpedia and OKF Greece (see video)
Bridging the Gap between DBpedia and Natural Language, Christina Unger from CITEC – Lately we released the first version of a lexicon that captures linguistically rich information about verbalizations of 354 DBpedia classes and the 300 most frequent DBpedia properties in English (soon also Spanish and German). Such a lexicon can prove useful for a wide range of NLP applications over DBpedia. However, in order to keep the construction, extension and maintenance of such a multilingual lexicon feasible, it is necessary to include the DBpedia community in crowd-sourcing lexicalizations. We would like to discuss ways to do this and show possible benefits. (see video)
11:00 Coffee in front of MF-G613
11:30 Session 2 Use Cases for DBpedia, companies/developers, lightning talks, Room: MF-G613 Session 2 Notepad
Using DBpedia for work on enterprise taxonomies and Linked Open Data (LOD) integration at Semantic Web Company, Martin Kaltenböck, Semantic Web Company will explain how the Austrian-based IT vendor for semantic information management Semantic Web Company (SWC) uses DBpedia for A) the work (creation, linking, and optimisation) on enterprise taxonomies with their core product PoolParty Semantic Suite and the SKOSsy service as well as B) how SWC uses DBpedia in several real world scenarios in the area of Linked Open Data (LOD) integration (entity linking, geo-tagging, et al). He will explain underlying mechanisms as well as show real world examples / use cases of SWC / PoolParty customers. (see video)
Metadata Vocabularies and Cultural Heritage. Reconciling static and dynamic views (slides), Gerard Kuys, Dutch DBpedia and Ordina (see video)
Datao – LinkedData at your fingertips NOW! by Oliver Rossel of http://datao.net/. Datao is a simple tool for LinkedData exploration and curation. Its user interface helps design and run SPARQL queries graphically. Find an endpoint, explore its data model, drag n drop data model elements to build a SPARQL query, click run and browse results as spreadsheet, map or form. Datao also manages a query repository, organized by categories (going from Travels to Education to Space to Libraries, etc). (see video)
Digital Hermeneutics: From Information Delivery to Information Support by Lora Aroyo from VU Amsterdam (see video)
Automatically Building Huge Gazetteers, Marco Fossati, SpazioDati. Lightning talk + company use case describing how to create linguistic resources with simple queries to DBpedia (see video)
DBpedia based Movie Recommendations (industry project for cENTERTAIN.me by Harald Sack from Hasso-Plattner-Institut, Discussion the problems: timeliness of results, mapping among different language versions of DBpedia, reliable Linking to other LOD resources) (see video)
German Government funded Project ‘D-Werft’ (Digital Dockyard) for Semantic Data Integration in the Media Production Value Chain by Harald Sack from Hasso-Plattner-Institut about applying DBpedia as data reference hub, uses DBpedia for Named Entity Disambiguation) (see video)
Presentation about industrial use cases using DBpedia Deutsch, Adrian Paschke, Alexandru Todor (see video)
13:00 Lunch in front of room MF-A311 and MF-A301
14:00 Break-Out Sessions (BOS)
BOS 1 Room: MF-A311 BOS1 Notepad Exploring the connection of DBpedia to Library and Cultural Heritage (Chairs: Gerard Kuys, Thomas Riechert, Antoine Isaac)

BOS 2 Room: MF-A301 BOS2 Notepad Linking text to LOD entities (Chairs: Marieke van Erp, Victor de Boer, Agata Filipowska, Sebastian Hellmann)

BOS 3 Room: MF-B034 BOS3 Notepad What is wrong with DBpedia? Developers discussion on how to improve our baby – Presentations & Discussion (Chairs: Harald Sack, Marco Fossati, Mariano Rico)

15:30 Coffee in front of room MF-A311 and MF-A301
16:00 Parallel sessions for 90 min
PS 1 Room: MF-A301 PS1 Notepad DBpedia tutorial (Sebastian Hellmann)

PS 2 Room: MF-B034 PS3 Notepad DBpedia I18N developers session – Presentations & Discussion (Chair: Mariano Rico, Dimitris Kontokostas, Marco Fossati, Magnus Knuth)

PS 3 Room: MF-A311 PS3 Notepad Local Dutch DBpedia Chapter Meeting (Chair: Enno Meijers, Gerard Kuys)

PS 4 possibility to continue break out sessions 😉
17:30 Closing Session in Room: MF-G613
18:00 Drinks, finally!

Co-located with the PiLOD 2.0 meeting

When: January 29th, 2014
Where: same location, different room

PiLOD (Platform implementatie Linked Open Data) organizes a meeting on the 29th of January. The program can be found on the main page at http://www.pilod.nl and further information is available here: [1] and [2] (in Dutch).