Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization

Background. Scientific documents often contain knowledge about what one entity did to another entity under what conditions (such as time, place, and method), which is related to another statement of what one entity did to another entity under what conditions. Such knowledge can be represented as rel...

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Main Author: Wu, Yejun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154411
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1544112021-12-22T20:11:39Z Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization Wu, Yejun Library and information science Background. Scientific documents often contain knowledge about what one entity did to another entity under what conditions (such as time, place, and method), which is related to another statement of what one entity did to another entity under what conditions. Such knowledge can be represented as relations between entities and events. Here what one entity did to another entity under what condition is defined as an event, which expresses the relationship between two entities under a condition. Objective. The objective of this paper is to design a model of entity and event relationship that can be used to represent knowledge identified from scientific documents and to facilitate knowledge discovery and organization. Method. The paper first presents a brief literature review on causal relationships, then evaluates four existing knowledge organization models and five event ontologies for their commonalities and differences in representing entity relationships and event relationships. The paper then proposes a combined entity and event relationship model based on the strengths of the existing event ontologies. Five main kinds of entity and event relationships are identified from an oil spill document set. Results. The three domain event ontologies, CIDOC CRM, Event Ontology and NewsML-G2, are only useful in serving specific purposes. The two generic event ontologies, DOLCE+DnS and Event Model F, must be enriched to be useful for representing knowledge for discovery. An entity and event model is proposed based on the strengths of these event models for representing knowledge in scientific documents. Published version 2021-12-22T05:53:15Z 2021-12-22T05:53:15Z 2020 Journal Article Wu, Y. (2020). Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization. Library and Information Science Research E-Journal, 29(2), 77-90. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LIBRES.2019.2.1 1058-6768 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154411 10.32655/LIBRES.2019.2.1 2 29 77 90 en Library and Information Science Research E-Journal © 2020 Yejun Wu. All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Library and information science
spellingShingle Library and information science
Wu, Yejun
Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization
description Background. Scientific documents often contain knowledge about what one entity did to another entity under what conditions (such as time, place, and method), which is related to another statement of what one entity did to another entity under what conditions. Such knowledge can be represented as relations between entities and events. Here what one entity did to another entity under what condition is defined as an event, which expresses the relationship between two entities under a condition. Objective. The objective of this paper is to design a model of entity and event relationship that can be used to represent knowledge identified from scientific documents and to facilitate knowledge discovery and organization. Method. The paper first presents a brief literature review on causal relationships, then evaluates four existing knowledge organization models and five event ontologies for their commonalities and differences in representing entity relationships and event relationships. The paper then proposes a combined entity and event relationship model based on the strengths of the existing event ontologies. Five main kinds of entity and event relationships are identified from an oil spill document set. Results. The three domain event ontologies, CIDOC CRM, Event Ontology and NewsML-G2, are only useful in serving specific purposes. The two generic event ontologies, DOLCE+DnS and Event Model F, must be enriched to be useful for representing knowledge for discovery. An entity and event model is proposed based on the strengths of these event models for representing knowledge in scientific documents.
format Article
author Wu, Yejun
author_facet Wu, Yejun
author_sort Wu, Yejun
title Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization
title_short Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization
title_full Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization
title_fullStr Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization
title_full_unstemmed Modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization
title_sort modeling entity and event relations in scientific documents for supporting knowledge discovery and organization
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154411
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