Wikidata (http://www.wikidata.org) is the linked database of the Wikimedia Foundation. Like its sister project Wikipedia it is open to humans and machines. Initially primarily intended as a central repository of structured data for the approximately 200 language versions of Wikipedia, Wikidata currently also serves many other use cases. It is an open, Semantic Web-compatible database that anyone can edit. Here, we present the Gene Wiki initiative. In 2008, this project started by creating Wikipedia articles for all human genes (Huss et al. 2008). These articles were enriched with structured information on these genes as tables (called infoboxes). With the onset of Wikidata in 2012, the project diverted its attention from the infoboxes and...
Wikidata is the newest project of the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF), the non-profit U.S.-based foundati...
Large knowledge bases integrating different domains can provide a foundation for new applications in...
Background: Pandemics, even more than other medical problems, require swift integration of knowledge...
<p>Data in the life sciences are abundant, but dispersed over many different resources. However, for...
This talk explores the role Wikidata (Vrandečić and Krötzsch 2014) might play in the task of assembl...
This talk explores the role Wikidata (Vrandečić and Krötzsch 2014) might play in the task of assembl...
<p>Wikidata is an open, Semantic Web-compatible database that anyone, humans and machines alike, can...
The process of creating, maintaining, updating, and integrating biological databases (biocuration) i...
<p>The Gene Wiki project emerged in 2008 to provide a way to centralize information about human gene...
Wikidata your public linked database on anything. Wikipedia exists in almost 300 language versions. ...
Biodiversity research and education take place in a socio-cultural ecosystem that connects researche...
Slides from my talk on Wikidata as infrastructure to represent knowledge on biodiversity at the Smit...
Wikidata is a community-maintained knowledge base that has been assembled from repositories in the f...
With the advancement of genome-sequencing technologies, new genomes are being sequenced daily. Altho...
Abstract-Wikidata is a world readable and writable knowledge base maintained by the Wikimedia Founda...
Wikidata is the newest project of the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF), the non-profit U.S.-based foundati...
Large knowledge bases integrating different domains can provide a foundation for new applications in...
Background: Pandemics, even more than other medical problems, require swift integration of knowledge...
<p>Data in the life sciences are abundant, but dispersed over many different resources. However, for...
This talk explores the role Wikidata (Vrandečić and Krötzsch 2014) might play in the task of assembl...
This talk explores the role Wikidata (Vrandečić and Krötzsch 2014) might play in the task of assembl...
<p>Wikidata is an open, Semantic Web-compatible database that anyone, humans and machines alike, can...
The process of creating, maintaining, updating, and integrating biological databases (biocuration) i...
<p>The Gene Wiki project emerged in 2008 to provide a way to centralize information about human gene...
Wikidata your public linked database on anything. Wikipedia exists in almost 300 language versions. ...
Biodiversity research and education take place in a socio-cultural ecosystem that connects researche...
Slides from my talk on Wikidata as infrastructure to represent knowledge on biodiversity at the Smit...
Wikidata is a community-maintained knowledge base that has been assembled from repositories in the f...
With the advancement of genome-sequencing technologies, new genomes are being sequenced daily. Altho...
Abstract-Wikidata is a world readable and writable knowledge base maintained by the Wikimedia Founda...
Wikidata is the newest project of the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF), the non-profit U.S.-based foundati...
Large knowledge bases integrating different domains can provide a foundation for new applications in...
Background: Pandemics, even more than other medical problems, require swift integration of knowledge...