Hi Tom,
I don't know if you are involved with Pleiades, but I have some questions.
I found the data at http://atlantides.org/downloads/pleiades/rdf/ - many thanks.
It has some sameAs links :-)
But I have some worries:
It has triples like
<http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/991318#this> owl:sameAs 
<http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/981510#this> .
The <http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/991318#this> goes to a page entitled 
"Duplicate Baetica".
In that page it says "Link from a duplicate to the master Baetica".
I worry a bit about this, as it may be saying that the link page is owl:sameAs 
master page, which would clearly be wrong.

More problematic for me (for sameAs.org!) is that the duplicate link is not 
Linked Data.
If I try to get RDF from it, it gives "HTTP/1.1 500 Internal Server Error" and 
html.
Is all this the intended behaviour?

Great resource, of course!

Best
Hugh

On 26 Aug 2013, at 14:16, Tom Elliott <[email protected]>
 wrote:

> Hi all:
> 
> Two humanities datasets of potential interest in this regard:
> 
> A number of datasets (around 20 different ones I think) related to the study 
> of antiquity have aligned their geographic/toponymic fields with the Pleiades 
> gazetteer (http://pleiades.stoa.org) and published RDF accordingly. Most of 
> this work has been done under the auspices of something called the Pelagios 
> Project, and the alignment processes used by many of the participants are 
> documented in blog posts at http://pelagios-project.blogspot.com/ (most of 
> them a combination of automated and manual). Pleiades itself is also a linked 
> data resource, and has a growing number (still only a small percentage of its 
> content) of outbound links to dbpedia, geonames, and OSM. All of those 
> outbound links are hand-curated. Contributors to Pleiades, where possible, 
> are aligned to VIAF (manually) and bibliography in Pleiades is also beginning 
> to be aligned to the Open Library and Worldcat (again, manually).
> 
> On a much smaller scale, I offer the "About Roman Emperors" dataset, which 
> rather than minting its own URIs for the Roman emperors, uses the dbpedia 
> resource URIs for each: http://www.paregorios.org/resources/roman-emperors/. 
> The primary purpose of the dataset is to provide a comprehensive list of 
> these for easy access and reuse by third parties, and to associate the 
> dbpedia URIs with corresponding Roman imperial mint and minting authority 
> data in nomisma.org and finds.org.uk, and to a static, late-90s-vintage 
> scholarly encyclopedia of Roman emperors: http://www.roman-emperors.org/
> 
> Tom
> 
> 
> Tom Elliott, Ph.D.
> Associate Director for Digital Programs and Senior Research Scholar
> Institute for the Study of the Ancient World (NYU)
> http://isaw.nyu.edu/people/staff/tom-elliott
> 
> 
> 
> On Aug 26, 2013, at 6:04 AM, Adrian Stevenson wrote:
> 
>> Hi All
>> 
>> As part of the LOCAH and Linking Lives projects, the latter in particular, 
>> we've being doing a lot of this auto and manual linking work, mainly to VIAF 
>> and DBPedia, with some links to things like LCSH and Geonames. We've been 
>> doing a lot of work just recently in fact, and we've published a blog post 
>> that's picked up quite a bit of interest on this - 
>> http://archiveshub.ac.uk/blog/2013/08/hub-viaf-namematching/. We haven't 
>> published our latest run of data yet, but we hope to finish this soon. It'll 
>> probably still be about a month or so as a few of us are on holiday soon.
>> 
>> We do have quite a few links done semi-automatically in our existing data 
>> set accessible via http://data.archiveshub.ac.uk but as I say we are 
>> updating this, I'd suggest not taking the URIs and data available there as 
>> the final word.
>> 
>> A good example is 
>> http://data.archiveshub.ac.uk/page/person/nra/webbmarthabeatrice1858-1943socialreformer
>> 
>> Project URIs:
>> http://archiveshub.ac.uk/locah/
>> http://archiveshub.ac.uk/linkinglives/
>> 
>> Adrian
>> _____________________________
>> Adrian Stevenson
>> Senior Technical Innovations Coordinator
>> Mimas, The University of Manchester
>> Devonshire House, Oxford Road
>> Manchester M13 9QH
>> 
>> Email: [email protected]
>> Tel: +44 (0) 161 275 6065
>> http://www.mimas.ac.uk
>> http://www.twitter.com/adrianstevenson
>> http://uk.linkedin.com/in/adrianstevenson/
>> 
>> On 22 Aug 2013, at 16:06, Cristina Sarasua wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi, 
>>> 
>>> I am looking for pairs of linked data sets that can be used as gold 
>>> standard for evaluations.  I would need pairs of data sets which have been 
>>> manually linked, or data sets which have been (semi-)automatically linked 
>>> with interlinking tools, and afterwards reviewed (to include the links 
>>> which are not identified by tools). I have looked into the DataHub 
>>> catalogue and queried VoiD descriptions, but unfortunately the information 
>>> about how the interlinking process was carried out is often missing.
>>> 
>>> Apart from the data sets which have been used in the OAEI-instance matching 
>>> track, could anyone recommend (based on past experience) good data sets for 
>>> evaluating data interlinking processes?
>>> 
>>> Thanks in advance.
>>> 
>>> Kind regards, 
>>> 
>>> Cristina
>>> -- 
>>> Cristina Sarasua
>>> 
>>> Institute for Web Science and Technologies (WeST)
>>> 
>>> Universität Koblenz-Landau
>>> Universitätsstraße 1
>>> 56070 Koblenz
>>> Germany
>>> 
>>> e: 
>>> [email protected]
>>> 
>>> p: +49 261 287 2772
>>> f: +49 261 287 100 2772
>>> w: 
>>> http://west.uni-koblenz.de 
>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> 


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