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Nanopublication for Data Science

Nanopublication A nanopublication contains as main content a statement in the assertion part (shown in blue) encoded in a way that computers can understand. It is expressed as one or more subject-relation-object structures, each shown on a separate line, where the identifier of the subject (left) is connected to the identifier of the object (right) via the identifier of the relation type (middle).

  https://w3id.org/kpxl/ios/ds/np/RAaW_zNLm51qAmLKVkevq20lojiqiyQTAZlgJqWSqK4ZQ RAaW_zNLm5   "simile detection"

/ios/ds/terms/ https://w3id.org/kpxl/ios/ds/terms/simile_detection simile_detection asserts that the given thing (left) belongs to the given class (right) http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type is a a concrete or abstract thing that is given an identifier and a name http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#NamedIndividual named invididual .

This nanopublication has a newer version.

Type Description This is the description of the type this nanopublication belongs to.

Such nanopublications define a new named individual. Such a named individual represets a single concrete or abstract thing that is in some way relevant. Examples are the planet Mars, Marie Curie, or the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Such individuals do not represent sets of things, like humans, diseases, or ideas. Such concepts representing sets should be defined with the template for classes.

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