International audienceGraph data is central to many applications, ranging from social networks to scientific databases. Graph formats maximize the flexibility offered to data designers, as they are mostly schema-less and thus can be used to capture very heterogeneous-structure content. RDF, the W3C's format for sharing open (linked) data, adds the possibility to attach semantics to data, describing application-domain constraints by means of ontologies; in turn, this leads to implicit data that is also part of a graph even if it is not explicitly in it. In this paper, we present a structured walk through the problem of analyzing and exploring RDF graphs by finding groups of structurally similar nodes, and by automatically identifying interes...