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Harry Sahyoun

Collective Knowledge Systems: Where the Social Web meets the Semantic Web - 1 views

  • Collective Knowledge Systems: Where the Social Web meets the Semantic Web
  • What can happen if we combine the best ideas from the Social Web and Semantic Web?
  • The Vision of Collective Intelligence
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  • The Social Web is represented by a class of web sites and applications in which user participation is the primary driver of value.
  • Collective intelligence is a grand vision, one to which I subscribe.  However, I would call the current state of the Social Web something else: collected intelligence.   That is, the value of these user contributions is in their being collected together and aggregated into community- or domain-specific sites
  • The grand challenge is to boost the collective IQ of organizations and of society
  • With the rise of the Social Web, we now have millions of humans offering their knowledge online, which means that the information is stored, searchable, and easily shared.  The challenge for the next generation of the Social and Semantic Webs is to find the right match between what is put online and methods for doing useful reasoning with the data.  True collective intelligence can emerge if the data collected from all those people is aggregated and recombined to create new knowledge and new ways of learning that individual humans cannot do by themselves.
  • Technology can augment the discovery and creation of knowledge. For instance, some drug discovery approaches embody a system for learning from models and data that are extracted from published papers and associated datasets.  By assembling large databases of known entities relevant to human biology, researchers can run computations that generate and test hypotheses about possible new therapeutic agents.
  • The first approach is to expose the structured data that already underlies the unstructured web pages.  An obvious technique is for the site builder, who is generating unstructured web pages from a database, to expose the structured data in those pages using standard formats.
  • the second approach, to extract structured data from unstructured user contributions [2] [28] [39] .  It is possible to do a reasonable job at identifying people, companies, and other entities with proper names, products, instances of relations you are interested in (e.g., person joining a company) [1] [7] , or instances of questions being asked [24] . There also techniques for pulling out candidates to use as classes and relations, although these are a bit noisier than the directed pattern matching algorithms [8] [23]  [31] [32] [36] [38] [42]
  • Tomorrow, the web will be understood as an active human-computer system, and we will learn by telling it what we are interested in, asking it what we collectively know, and using it to apply our collective knowledge to address our collective needs.
  • The other major area where Semantic Web can help achieve the vision of collective intelligence is in the area of interoperability.  If the world's knowledge is to be found on the Web, then we should be able to use it to answer questions, retrieve facts, solve problems, and explore possibilities. 
  • In a sense, the TagCommons project is attempting to create a platform for interoperability of social web data on the Semantic Web that is akin to the "mash-up" ecology that is celebrated in Web 2.0.
  • An example of how a system might apply some of these ideas is RealTravel.  RealTravel is an example of "Web 2.0 for travel".  It attracts travelers to share their experiences: sharing their itineraries, stories, photographs, where they stayed, what they did, and their recommendations for fellow travelers.  Writers think of RealTravel as a great platform to share their experiences -- a blog site that caters to this domain.  People who are planning travel use the site as a source of information to research their trip,
  • The collection of tags for a site is called the folksonomy, which is useful data about collective interests.
  • like many Web 2.0 sites, combines these structured dimensions to order the unstructured content.  For example, one can find all the travel blogs about diving, sorted by rating.  In fact, the site combines all of the structured dimensions into a matrix, which offers the user a way to "pivot browse" along any dimension from any point in the matrix.
  • This paper argues that the Social Web and the Semantic Web should be combined, and that collective knowledge systems are the "killer applications" of this integration.  The keys to getting the most from collective knowledge systems, toward true collective intelligence, are tightly integrating user-contributed content and machine-gathered data, and harvesting the knowledge from this combination of unstructured and structured information.
  • Structured and unstructured, formal and informal -- these are not new dimensions.  They are typically considered poles of a continuum.
  • We are beginning to see companies launching services under the banner of Web 3.0 [25] that aim explicitly at collective intelligence.  For instance, MetaWeb [35] is collecting a commons of integrated, structured data in a social web manner, and Radar Networks [25] is applying semantic web technologies to enrich the applications and data of the social web.
  • The third approach is to capture structured data on the way into the system.  The straightforward technique is to give users tools for structuring their data, such as ways of adding structured fields and making class hierarchies.
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Folksonomies_Semantic_Collectivities Web2_To_Web3
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      3-étoiles
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Activité-A
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    Technology can augment the discovery and creation of knowledge. For instance, some drug discovery approaches embody a system for learning from models and data that are extracted from published papers and associated datasets. By assembling large databases of known entities relevant to human biology, researchers can run computations that generate and test hypotheses about possible new therapeutic agents
Caroline Arseneau

Intelligence collective | - 0 views

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    L'intelligence collective sur Internet est définie par le philosophe canadien Pierre Lévy comme « le projet d'une intelligence variée, partout distribuée ; sans cesse valorisée, coordonnée et mise en synergie en temps réel ; et qui aboutit à une mobilisation effective des connaissances. 2»
El mouenis

Chapitre 2 du livre : Collective Intelligence in Action - 0 views

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    Satnam Alag (2009) dans ce chapitre (comme exemple) couvre : ■ L'Architecture d'application de l'intelligence ■ Les concepts techniques de base derrière l'intelligence collective ■ Les nombreuses formes d'interaction utilisateur ■ Un exemple de travail de la façon dont l'interaction avec l'utilisateur s'est converti en intelligence collective
Harry Sahyoun

Intelligence at the Interface Semantic Technology and the Consumer Internet Experience - 0 views

    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Harvesting_Reasoning_Semantic
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Intelligence at the Interface applying the best of the Internet (intelligently) to support your daily life
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Activité-A
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    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      2-étoiles
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      indexing_Ranking_Quality
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      2-étoiles
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Activité-A
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    web-scale indexing and ranking find relevant content and filter on quality
El mouenis

L'intelligence collective vs la sagesse des foules - 3 views

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    Henry Jenkins explique l'«intelligence collective» et «la sagesse des foules" sans confondre les deux ; surtout pour la production de connaissances.
El mouenis

Le web social pour une collaboration d'Intelligence Collective - 17 views

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    Activité E : Synthèse.
El mouenis

Le Blog d'El-Mouenis sur l'Intelligence Collective - 5 views

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    L'activité-B sur l'Intelligence Collective
edabou

Reinventing Discovery | Michael Nielsen - 0 views

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    Reinventing Discovery by Michael Nielsen on October 9, 2011 I'm very excited to say that my new book, "Reinventing Discovery: The New Era of Networked Science", has just been released! The book is about networked science: the use of online tools to transform the way science is done. In the book I make the case that networked science has the potential to dramatically speed up the rate of scientific discovery, not just in one field, but across all of science. Furthermore, it won't just speed up discovery, but will actually amplify our collective intelligence, expanding the range of scientific problems which can be attacked at all.
carolineproulx

Des métadonnées qui en disent long | Le Devoir - 2 views

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    L'Université Stanford demande la suspension des collectes de métadonnées liées aux téléphones intelligents. Selon eux, cette surveillance permettrait de dresser des profils beaucoup trop précis des utilisateurs.
Christophe Duret

Les illusions de la gamification - 0 views

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    Selon Yann Leroux, les jeux vidéos ne peuvent pas contribuer à améliorer la qualité de vie des êtres humains en étant employés de manière constructive, par la "gamification".
Danielle St-Amand

Did you know ? - 2 views

    • Daniele Massicotte
       
      Le lien pour Did you know? 2.0 en français est invalide. Le bon lien est: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cuZ3hTEx7WI
    • Daniele Massicotte
       
      Lien pour The Machine is Us/ing Us est invalide. Le bon lien est: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gmP4nk0EOE
    • Christophe Duret
       
      Le lien de la source est brisé. L'intervention de Theodore Zeldin est disponible à l'adresse suivante: http://www.auradigital.net/web/Art-i-cultura-digital/Documents/le-futur-de-linternet-une-conversation-avec-theodore-zeldin.html
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    • Christophe Duret
       
      Le paragraphe suivant contient une faute d'orthographe et deux formulations impropres, que nous avons mises entre parenthèses: "Face aux enjeux à venir, signalé(s) par les professeurs du Colorado dans le vidéo Did you know, la société de l'information induirait une augmentation de l'importance que l'on doit porter à la « réputation » des informations (et des gens) - c'est-à-dire la manière dont les autres les évaluent et les classent - Origgi dit que la réputation risque d'être la seule manière dont nous pouvons tirer une information à son sujet. La "sagesse collective" se chargera de hiérarchiser ces "choses". On verra (donc apparaître) des "systèmes de réputation" qui se metteront en place pour pallier (et non "pallier à) ce problème."
    • Christophe Duret
       
      En anglais: "Personal" et non "Personnal"
    • Christophe Duret
       
      Quelques fautes d'orthographe (nous les avons mises entre parenthèses): "La cybernétique, suivi(e) des sciences cognitives, a repoussé dans ses derniers retranchements la définition de qui fait de nous un 'animal intelligent'. Il n'y a qu'un pas, vite franchi, pour placer la technologie comme prochain prétendant au trône. La montée en puissance des ordinateurs, leur force de calcul (pas de s) à l'oeuvre, ouvre la perspective qu'un jour les humains soient dépassés. Ou du moins, fortement assisté(s) par les machines pour traiter la complexité du monde."
    • Christophe Duret
       
      Les sous-titres du module 8.5 devraient être numérotés 8.5.1 et 8.5.2, au lieu de 9.5.1 et 9.5.2
    • Danielle St-Amand
       
      Le seul des 3 liens qui fonctionne est dotsub : http://dotsub.com/view/f3f91861-f623-4614-8c1e-c24a9a53b4cf
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