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Bridging Data Gaps: Harnessing Semantic Associations for Knowledge Discovery in Colonial Heritage

Research output: Chapter in Book / Report / Conference proceedingConference contributionAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Cultural heritage data, particularly from colonial contexts, frequently presents an incomplete and biased view, reflecting historical institutional priorities more than contemporary knowledge requirements. Consequently, knowledge graphs derived from these records often contain incomplete, fragmented, and skewed data, including absent attributes or values, missing semantic links, and under-represented perspectives. This work addresses the challenge of knowledge discovery under such limitations, presenting a real-world case study on the provenance research of colonial cultural heritage. We present a task-aware design method for building a tool to facilitate this process. The design approach of this application is rooted in a Knowledge Discovery in Database (KDD) framework and is particularly novel due to its formalisation and operationalisation of three distinct types of semantic association: explicit, abstract, and implicit. These semantic associations, grounded in domain interpretation, are crucial for bridging data gaps where user information needs cannot be directly met by existing data. We further demonstrate how these associations can be effectively communicated through user interface components, enabling users to infer new knowledge. We evaluated the resultant application through a user study among domain experts to assess its efficacy. The evaluation confirms the effectiveness of the tool in enabling new knowledge discovery and reveals opportunities to improve the representation of the underlying data, as users could successfully infer insights even when information was missing or poorly captured in the original data sets.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationK-CAP '25: Proceedings of the 13th Knowledge Capture Conference 2025
EditorsCogan Shimizu, Sebastian Ferrada, Lalana Kagal
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery, Inc
Pages35-43
Number of pages9
ISBN (Electronic)9798400718670
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025
Event13th International Conference on Knowledge Capture, K-CAP 2025 - Dayton, United States
Duration: 10 Dec 202512 Dec 2025

Conference

Conference13th International Conference on Knowledge Capture, K-CAP 2025
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityDayton
Period10/12/2512/12/25

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Copyright held by the owner/author(s).

Funding

Thanks to the participants of our user study for their time, feedback, and engagement, which greatly contributed to the evaluation and refinement of our web application. This research was supported by the NWA-funded project Pressing Matter (NWA.1292.19.419), by the Research Council of Finland FIN-CLARIAH funding from the European Union NextGenerationEU instrument, and by the Aalto Science Institute (ASCI) Visiting Doctoral Researcher Programme. Computing resources provided by the CSC IT Center for Science were used in our work.

Funders
Aalto Science Institute
Research Council of Finland
European Commission
NWA-funded
China Scholarship Council

    Keywords

    • Cultural Heritage
    • Exploratory Knowledge Discovery
    • Linked Data
    • Provenance Research

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