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Incredibly useful, knowledge graphs help organizations keep track
of medical research, cybersecurity threat intelligence, GDPR
compliance, web user engagement, and much more. They do so by
saving interlinked descriptions of entities (objects, events,
situations, or abstract concepts) while encoding the semantics
underlying the terminology. How do you create a knowledge graph?
And how do you move it from theory into practice? Using hands-on
examples, this practical book shows data scientists and data
practitioners how to build their own custom knowledge graphs.
Authors Jesus Barrasa and Jim Webber from Neo4j illustrate patterns
commonly used for building knowledge graphs that solve many of
today's pressing problems. You'll quickly discover how these graphs
become exponentially more useful as you add more data. Learn the
organizing principles necessary to build a knowledge graph Explore
how graph databases serve as a foundation for knowledge graphs
Understand how to import structured and unstructured data into your
graph Follow examples to build integration-and-search knowledge
graphs Understand what pattern detection knowledge graphs help you
accomplish Explore dependency knowledge graphs through examples Use
examples of natural language knowledge graphs and chatbots
From the fight against the AIDS crisis to the struggle for Black
liberation and international solidarity, Graphic Liberation! digs
deep into the history, present, and future of revolutionary
political image making. What is the role of image and aesthetic in
revolution? Through a series of interviews with some of the most
accomplished designers, Josh MacPhee charts the importance of
revolutionary aesthetics from the struggle for abolition by Black
Panthers, the agitation during the AIDS crisis from ACT-UP, the
fight against apartheid in South Africa and Palestine, as well as
everyday organizing against nuclear power, for housing, and
international solidarity in Germany, Japan, China, and beyond. In
twelve interviews, political designer and street artist Josh
MacPhee talks to decorated graphic designers such as Avram
Finkelstein, Emory Douglas, and more, focussing on each of their
contributions to the field of political graphics, their
relationships to social movements and political organizing, the
history of political image making, and issues arising from
reproduction and copyright.
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