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  <event:Event rdf:about="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/event/html/id/262/How-To-Tell-Stuff-To-Your-Computer-The-Enigmatic-Art-of-Knowledge-Representation">
    <rdfs:label><![CDATA[How To Tell Stuff To Your Computer- The Enigmatic Art of Knowledge Representation]]></rdfs:label>
    <event:title><![CDATA[How To Tell Stuff To Your Computer- The Enigmatic Art of Knowledge Representation]]></event:title>
    <event:speaker><person:Collaborator rdf:about="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/person/html/Conrad/Barski/"><person:name><![CDATA[Conrad  Barski]]></person:name><rdfs:label><![CDATA[Conrad  Barski]]></rdfs:label></person:Collaborator></event:speaker>
    <event:startDate rdf:datatype="&xsd;dateTime">2008-10-17T13:00:00-05:00</event:startDate>
    <event:endDate rdf:datatype="&xsd;dateTime">1999-10-17T14:15:00-05:00</event:endDate>
    <event:location><![CDATA[LH 8 ITE building, UMBC]]></event:location>
    <event:abstract><![CDATA[Have you ever wondered how we take information from the "real world" and put it into our computers? When we do this, do we lose parts of the information? Are some concepts just too hard to turn into ones and zeroes? How is our ability to enter information limited by the data structures we use inside of our computers? These questions enter into a science that is rarely discussed: The science of Knowledge Representation.
<p>
My presentation on KR will include some navel gazing, but also some nitty-gritty practical examples of Description Logics, RDF, and other modern approaches to capturing complicated information within a computer. We will also discuss some likely future directions this field may head into.
<p>
You can submit a question to Dr. Barski either before, during or after the talk <a href="http://tinyurl.com/askDrBarski">here</a>.
]]></event:abstract>
    <event:tag><![CDATA[ai]]></event:tag>
    <event:tag><![CDATA[knowledge representation]]></event:tag>
    <event:tag><![CDATA[semantic web]]></event:tag>
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