Knowledge base
A knowledge base (abbreviated KB, kb or Δ[1][2]) is a special kind of database for knowledge management. A knowledge base provides a means for information to be collected, organised, shared, searched and utilised.
Types
Knowledge bases are essentially closed or open information repositories and can be categorised under two main headings:
- Machine-readable knowledge bases store knowledge in a computer-readable form, usually for the purpose of having automated deductive reasoning applied to them. They contain a set of data, often in the form of rules that describe the knowledge in a logically consistent manner. An ontology can define the structure of stored data - what types of entities are recorded and what their relationships are. Logical operators, such as And (conjunction), Or (disjunction), material implication and negation may be used to build it up from simpler pieces of information. Consequently, classical deduction can be used to reason about the knowledge in the knowledge base. Some machine-readable knowledge bases are used with artificial intelligence, for example as part of an expert system that focuses on a domain like prescription drugs or customs law. Such knowledge bases are also used by the semantic web.
- A text based system that can include groups of documents including hyperlinks between them is known as Hypertext Systems.[3] Hypertext systems support the decision process by relieving the user of the significant effort it takes to relate and remember things." [4] Knowledge bases can exist on both computers and mobile phones in a hypertext format.[5]
- Knowledge base analysis and design (also known as KBAD) is an approach that allows people to conduct analysis and design in a way that results in a knowledge base, which can later be used to make informative decisions. This approach was first implemented by Dr. Steven H. Dam[6].
See also
Informational formats
Notes
External links
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Background |
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Applications |
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Standards |
Syntax & Supporting Technologies
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Schemas, Ontologies & Rules
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Semantic Annotation
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Common Vocabularies
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Computable knowledge
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Topics and
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Proposals and
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Zairja • Ars Magna ( Ramon Llull, 1300) • An Essay towards a Real Character and a Philosophical Language ( John Wilkins, 1688) • Calculus ratiocinator & Characteristica universalis ( Gottfried Leibniz, 1700) • Dewey Decimal Classification ( Melvil Dewey, 1876) • Begriffsschrift ( Gottlob Frege, 1879) • Mundaneum ( Paul Otlet & Henri La Fontaine, 1910) • Logical atomism ( Bertrand Russell, 1918) • Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus ( Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1921) • Hilbert's program ( David Hilbert, 1920s) • Incompleteness theorem ( Kurt Gödel, 1931) • Memex ( Vannevar Bush, 1945) • Prolog (1972) • Cyc (1984) • True Knowledge ( True Knowledge Ltd., 2007) • Wolfram Alpha ( Wolfram Research, 2009) • Watson ( IBM, 2011) • Siri ( Apple, 2011)
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In fiction |
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