Search Engine
Challenges Posed by the Semantic Web: "
A pre-print from Tim Finin and Li Deng entitled,
Search Engines for Semantic Web Knowledge,1 presents
a thoughtful and experienced overview of the challenges posed to
conventional search by semantic Web constructs.' The authors’ base
much of their observations on their experience with the Swoogle semantic Web
search engine over the past two years.' They also used Swoogle,
whose index contains information on over 1.3M RDF documents, to
generate statistics on the semantic Web size and growth in the
paper.
Among other points, the authors note these key differences and
challenges from conventional search engines:
-
Harvesting — the need to discriminantly discover
semantic Web documents and to accurately index their
semi-structured components
-
Search - the need for search to cover a broader range
than documents in a repository, going from the universal to the
atomic granularity of a triple.' Path tracing and provenance of the
information may also be important
-
Rank — results ranking needs to account for the
contribution of the semi-structured data, and
-
Archive — more versioning and tracking is needed since
undelrying ontologies will surely grow and evolve.
The authors particularly note the challenge of indexing
as repositories grow to actual Internet scales.
Though not noted, I would add to this list the challenge of user
interfaces. Only a small percentage of users, for example, use
Google’s more complicated advanced search form.' In its full-blown
implementation, semantic Web search variations could make the
advanced Google form look like child’s play.
'
1Tim Finin and Li Ding, 'Search Engines for Semantic
Web Knowledge,' a pre-print to be published in the Proceedings
of XTech 2006: Building Web 2.0, May 16, 2006, 19 pp.' A
PDF of the
paper is available for download.
"
(Via AI3 - Adaptive
Information:::.)