Author: buildbot
Date: Wed Jan 22 10:22:04 2014
New Revision: 895079
Log:
Staging update by buildbot for stanbol
Modified:
websites/staging/stanbol/trunk/content/ (props changed)
websites/staging/stanbol/trunk/content/docs/trunk/enhancementusage.html
Propchange: websites/staging/stanbol/trunk/content/
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--- cms:source-revision (original)
+++ cms:source-revision Wed Jan 22 10:22:04 2014
@@ -1 +1 @@
-1560304
+1560306
Modified:
websites/staging/stanbol/trunk/content/docs/trunk/enhancementusage.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/staging/stanbol/trunk/content/docs/trunk/enhancementusage.html
(original)
+++ websites/staging/stanbol/trunk/content/docs/trunk/enhancementusage.html Wed
Jan 22 10:22:04 2014
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@
<h2
id="entity-tagging-use-tags-to-relate-you-content-to-persons-places-events">Entity
Tagging: Use tags to relate you content to persons, places, events â¦</h2>
<p>Entity tagging is about suggesting user defined entities instead of strings
to tag their documents. The difference is very easy to explain. Let's assume a
blogger that uses the tag "Bob Marley" to tag a blog entry. Tagging is all
about structuring content. By tagging it with "Bob Marley" he can easily find
all documents that uses that tag. However, most likely he would also want to
create a category of documents about reggae music and most likely he would like
that documents tagged with "Bob Marley" are part of that group. </p>
<p>While the knowledge that "Bob Marley" is related to reggae music might be
obvious for the blogger as a person it can not be known by the blogging tool
she uses. Typically the only way to solve this is that the blogger tags the
document with both tags.</p>
-<p>Entity tagging tries to work around that by linking documents with entities
defined by a knowledge base. The fact that Bob Marley is related to reggae
music is nothing novel. <a href="http://dbpedia.org">DBpedia</a>, the Wikipedia
database, does know that and a lot more about the entity <a
href="dbpedia.org/resource/Bob_Marley">dbpedia:Bob_Marley</a>. If the blogger
tags her document with "dbpedia:Bob_Marley", she does not only tag it with "Bob
Marley" but also with all the other contextual information provided by DBPedia
- including the fact that Bob Marley was a reggae interpret.</p>
+<p>Entity tagging tries to work around that by linking documents with entities
defined by a knowledge base. The fact that Bob Marley is related to reggae
music is nothing novel. <a href="http://dbpedia.org">DBpedia</a>, the Wikipedia
database, does know that and a lot more about the entity <a
href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bob_Marley">dbpedia:Bob_Marley</a>. If the
blogger tags her document with "dbpedia:Bob_Marley", she does not only tag it
with "Bob Marley" but also with all the other contextual information provided
by DBPedia - including the fact that Bob Marley was a reggae interpret.</p>
<p>But this does not only work with famous people, big cities, etc. Nowadays
the Web <a href="http://linkeddata.org">links data</a> of different domains.
However, this is not only about the Web - it works even better if you use
entities relevant to yourself and/or your working environment (products,
articles, customers, etc).</p>
<h3 id="suggest-entities-with-the-apache-stanbol-enhancer">Suggest entities
with the Apache Stanbol Enhancer</h3>
<p>Requesting the Apache Stanbol Enhancer to analyze a text requires to send a
POST request as defined by the <a
href="components/enhancer/enhancerrest.html">RESTful API</a>.</p>