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The latest instance of the course can be found at: Semantic Web: 2024 MOOC

More SPARQL

In this section we will practice CONSTRUCT and federated queries We will display SPARQL query results on Google Maps, try out YASGUI’s advanced tools and learn about SPARQL Update language.

Data transformation with SPARQL CONSTRUCT

We continue querying the WarSampo endpoint http://ldf.fi/warsa/sparql.

In WarSampo, military ranks are represented as instances of the class http://ldf.fi/schema/warsa/Rank. The ranks form a hierarchy using the dct:isPartOf property.

The dct prefix refers to http://purl.org/dc/terms/, which is a part of the Dublin Core Metadata Terms vocabulary. Many other systems use the SKOS standard to represent concept hierarchies.

Your task is to create a SPARQL CONSTRUCT query that transforms the existing dct:isPartOf hierarchy into a corresponding SKOS concept hierarchy. The created concepts should be instances of a suitable SKOS class. For the SKOS concepts, add SKOS properties for original labels, and the hierarchical relation using a proper predicate. You need to only worry about preferred labels. Alternative labels are not checked.

The SKOS Reference should be of assistance.

A+ presents the exercise submission form here.

Federated query

SPARQL allows you to query different SPARQL endpoints simultaneously using a federated query.

Create a federated query:

SELECT ?cityname ?latitude ?longitude ?photolabel ?thumbnailuri ...

that retrieves the coordinates of cities Maarianhamina and Nokia from the Finnish Geographic Names registry (PNR), enriched with the WarSampo wartime photographs that are taken in these cities. Send the federated query to the PNR endpoint http://ldf.fi/pnr/sparql, containing a subquery to WarSampo.

Hint: “Logical or” in SPARQL can be performed with UNION operator {?subject :my_predicate "this"} UNION {?subject :my_predicate "that"} or in FILTER FILTER (?object = "this" || ?object = "that"). Also, there is the VALUES keyword.

The Finnish Geographic Names registry contains names of places, along with their coordinates. The registry contains a separate class for every place type. Cities are instances of the class http://ldf.fi/pnr-schema#place_type_540.

The WarSampo data model contains a CIDOC CRM event for each photograph, depicting the photography event. The photography event is linked to the photograph with a crm:P94_has_created property. These events are linked to place resources, that correspond to where the photography took place with a crm:P7_took_place_at property. Conveniently some of these places are of type http://ldf.fi/pnr-schema#place_type_540.

The namespace prefix crm refers to http://www.cidoc-crm.org/cidoc-crm/.

Hint: a DESCRIBE query (or a few) might help in understanding the data and finding proper predicates to use for the federated query.

Extend the query to also return the photograph thumbnail URI, which can be found by following, from the photograph resource, the sequential links crm:P138i_has_representation and http://schema.org/contentUrl. There are multiple representational resources for each photograph containing a photograph URI, but you should use the one that is described as a thumbnail. Being described as a thumbnail can be identified by having a small size in WarSampo schema, which can be determined with http://ldf.fi/schema/warsa/photographs/size and http://ldf.fi/schema/warsa/photographs/sm.

A+ presents the exercise submission form here.

Using a SPARQL endpoint with JavaScript (3 pts)

Work on the federated query from the previous exercise to get one result row for each city by using aggregation methods. Aggregate the variable items to contain, as a string, the name of every photograph taken in the city, and the photograph URL. Use the symbols # and $ to separate photograph labels and URLs like this: “label1#url1 $ label2#url2 $ …”.

Hint: Useful SPARQL keywords: CONCAT, STR, BIND, GROUP_CONCAT, GROUP BY

Use this HTML page template to visualize your results on the world map provided by the Google Maps JavaScript API. You can download the template with e.g. wget myurl. You can also open the template as text from this link and save it by right-clicking the page and selecting “Save as…” (hotkey: Ctrl+S). The filename should end in .html for a browser to interpret the file as a HTML file.

Modify the JavaScript inside the HTML file to include your results on the map. You only need to add proper values to endpoint and query variables within the code. Then open the file with a modern browser.

When you click a marker on the map, an info window will open, showing the city name and the names and photographs taken there.

In case something goes wrong, you can add console logging (see the console.log() used in the template), to debug your JavaScript code and make sure your variables have the values you would expect. The messages sent to console.log() show up in the Console tab of web browser developer tools. You may also modify the page template in any way you want.

A+ presents the exercise submission form here.

Visualizing SPARQL results with YASGUI

Using YASGUI and the SPARQL endpoint of DBpedia (http://dbpedia.org/sparql), visualize how many people described in DBpedia have been born (dbo:birthPlace) in each Finnish city or town. Finnish cities and towns have a dct:subject relation to dbc:Cities_and_towns_in_Finland. Create a pie chart visualization, which can be found in YASGUI by clicking Google Chart → Chart config → Charts → Pie → Select your preferred pie chart. Include only the 20 cities with the largest amount of known people born in them, and use the English labels for cities.

YASGUI should automatically define the prefixes dct and dbc when you write them, or you can manually define them with:

PREFIX dbc: <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Category:>
PREFIX dct: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/>

Find the city which has the 4th highest birth count in Finland according to DBpedia.

Submit city name e.g. Espoo

Give the percentage for people born in Tampere of the birth counts given by the above query. (The generated pie chart gives the percentages per city)

Submit the percentage with one decimal precision e.g. 0.0%

SPARQL Update

The SPARQL Update language provides ways to modify RDF data stored in a SPARQL endpoint.

Examine the following SPARQL Update request and answer the following questionnaire.

WITH <http://ldf.fi/history/kb>
DELETE {
        ?u2 ?pred ?obj .
        ?u ?p ?u2 .
}
INSERT {
        ?u ?p ?u1 .
}
WHERE {
        VALUES ?class { <http://www.cidoc-crm.org/cidoc-crm/E21_Person> } .
        GRAPH <http://ldf.fi/history/kb> {
                  ?u1 a ?class .
                  ?u2 a ?class .
                  FILTER (?u1 != ?u2 && str(?u1) > str(?u2)) .
                  ?u1 <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label> ?label .
                  ?u2 <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label> ?label .
                  ?u2 ?pred ?obj .
                  ?u ?p ?u2 .
        }
}
What of the following the above UPDATE query does?

Serving RDF data

Apache Fuseki is a triplestore and SPARQL server. Install Fuseki2 on your own computer or the computers in the lab. Instructions for installation are given here. Basically you’ll just have to download and unpack the Fuseki distribution package. For a reference on publishing Linked Data, you can also read this additional learning material.

Once the Fuseki server is running (run the script fuseki-server in the unzipped directoy, or fuseki-server.bat for Windows) and data loaded, open http://localhost:3030 in your browser. You should see the Fuseki management application interface. Create a new dataset, and upload the turtle files found in this zip file. The files contain a taxonomy of Finnish birds, and characteristics annotations for some bird species.

Query the local endpoint using e.g. the YASGUI tool, which is also directly provided in the Fuseki installation. Find out the English labels for the characteristics of chaffinch (label "chaffinch"@en). You can inspect the data model by doing, for example, DESCRIBE queries.

A+ presents the exercise submission form here.

Posting submission...