Standard Scholarly Entity
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A Standard Scholarly Entity is a scholarly class that is a standard entity class.
- Context:
- It can be referenced by a Standard Scholarly Relationship.
- Example(s):
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Scholarly Ontology, Research Topic.
References
2016
- (Osborne et al., 2016) ⇒ Francesco Osborne, Helene de Ribaupierre, and Enrico Motta. (2016). “TechMiner: Extracting Technologies from Academic Publications.” In: Proceedings of 20th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management (EKAW 2016).
- QUOTE: In recent years we have seen the emergence of a variety of scholarly datasets. Typically these capture "standard" scholarly entities and their connections, such as authors, affiliations, venues, publications, citations, and others.
2015
- (Salatino, 2015) ⇒ Angelo Salatino. (2015). “Early Detection and Forecasting of Research Trends.” In: Proceedings of 14th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC 2015).
- QUOTE: Scholarly data can be used to analyse a huge amount of research elements such as papers, authors, affiliations, venues, topic and communities [19]. All these research elements are inherently interconnected by relations that can be defined as either explicit or implicit. Figure 1 shows, as an example, the six basic explicit connections between the research elements according to our model.
Fig. 1. Model representing the scholarly meta-data and their relationships
- QUOTE: Scholarly data can be used to analyse a huge amount of research elements such as papers, authors, affiliations, venues, topic and communities [19]. All these research elements are inherently interconnected by relations that can be defined as either explicit or implicit. Figure 1 shows, as an example, the six basic explicit connections between the research elements according to our model.