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Knowledge collection from volunteer contributors

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Knowledge collection from volunteer contributors (KCVC) is a subfield of knowledge acquisition within artificial intelligence which attempts to drive down the cost of acquiring the knowledge required to support automated reasoning by having the public enter knowledge in computer processable form over the internet. KCVC might be regarded as similar in spirit to Wikipedia, although the intended audience, artificial intelligence systems, differs.

History

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The 2005 AAAI Spring Symposium on Knowledge Collection from Volunteer Contributors (KCVC05) may have been the first research meeting on this topic.[1]

The first large-scale KCVC project was probably the Open Mind Common Sense (OMCS) project, initiated by Push Singh and Marvin Minsky at the MIT Media Lab.[when?] In this project, volunteers entered words or simple sentences in English in response to prompts or images. Although the resulting knowledge is not formally represented, it is provided to researchers with parses and other meta-information intended to increase its utility. Later, this group released ConceptNet, which embedded the knowledge contained in the OpenMind Common Sense database as a semantic network.

In late 2005, Cycorp released a KCVC system called FACTory[2] that attempts to acquire knowledge in a form directly usable for automated reasoning. It automatically generates questions in English from an underlying predicate calculus representation of candidate assertions produced by automated reading of web pages, by reviewing information previously entered directly in logical form, and by analogy and abduction.

References

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