On the cross-fertilization of geospatial and semantic web technology

FEW2007: find people on the Semantic Web

The 2nd International ExpertFinder Workshop: Finding Experts on the Web with Semantics (FEW2007) will be co-located with ISWC 2007 in Busan, Korea on November 12th, 2007.

ExpertFinder is an emerging collaborative initiative with the aim of devising vocabulary, rule extensions (for e.g. FOAF and SIOC) and best practices to annotate personal home pages, as well as web pages of institutions, conferences, publication indexes, etc. with adequate metadata to enable computer agents to find experts on particular topics.

I think FEW2007 will be an interesting workshop.

People search is a growing niche market on the Web. While nearly 50% of all web searches are done on Google, there is no clear winners in many of vertical search domains (e.g., travel, health and people).

Startup Spock is a leader in the people search domain (others include Pipl, PeekYou and Wink). Spock currently builds its database by scanning Web sites that people regularly post information about themselves and others, e.g., LinkedIn, MySpace and Facebook.

I think Semantic Web ontology like FOAF and SIOC will play important role in the development of people search engine. First, we have tons of FOAF and SIOC data running wild on the Web. Second, FOAF and SIOC allow more expressive representation of social network information. Third, people profiles described using these ontologies are more suitable for logical inference. It can help to enable knowledge fusion and data mining. Finally, publishing people profiles and social network information in RDF is less involved than publishing API for accessing back-end databases.

If all social network sites adopt FOAF as the standard vocabulary for expressing user profile, it will be easy for someone to build mashups of social networks across multiple sites (e.g., MySpace + Facebook + LinkedIn). Furthermore, if we treat each user profile as an RDF graph, we will be able to exploit SPARQL query services to query distributed data on the Web and begin to ask complex questions about our human social networks.

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6 Comments

  1. Amen! Open data and communication formats for interchange between social networking sites is very much needed.

    Comment by Dave Brondsema — July 23, 2007 @ 10:13 pm

  2. You wrote, “we will be able to…ask complex questions about our human social networks.” Can you share any examples of these complex questions?

    Comment by Jonathan W Lowe — July 24, 2007 @ 2:02 am

  3. Johnathan,

    I think a Semantic Web description of our social network can help to answer questions like following:

    1. How many people in my social network know my wife or any of her family members?
    2. Who are my high school classmates currently residing in the United States?
    3. How many people in my social network work for an oil-drilling company?

    - Harry

    Comment by harrychen — July 25, 2007 @ 7:29 am

  4. […] written an interesting post about how ontologies like FOAF and SIOC can play important roles in the development of a people search engine. This post was made in relation to the forthcoming Finding Experts on the Web with Semantics […]

    Pingback by State of the SIOC-o-sphere (#5) at Cloudlands — August 9, 2007 @ 7:47 am

  5. […] FEW2007: find people on the Semantic Web The 2nd International ExpertFinder Workshop: Finding Experts on the Web with Semantics (FEW2007) will be co-located with ISWC 2007 in Busan, Korea on November 12th, 2007. ExpertFinder is an emerging collaborative initiative with the aim of devising vocabulary, rule extensions (for e.g. FOAF and SIOC) and best practices to annotate personal … […]

    Pingback by Semantic Web Blog » Blog Archive » Some small schema updates — August 19, 2007 @ 9:01 pm

  6. […] FEW2007: find people on the Semantic Web The 2nd International ExpertFinder Workshop: Finding Experts on the Web with Semantics (FEW2007) will be co-located with ISWC 2007 in Busan, Korea on November 12th, 2007. ExpertFinder is an emerging collaborative initiative with the aim of devising vocabulary, rule extensions (for e.g. FOAF and SIOC) and best practices to annotate personal … […]

    Pingback by Semantic Web Blog — August 19, 2007 @ 10:21 pm

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