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Features The Next-Generation of Business Intelligence
Semantic Intelligence
By: Brooke Aker
Dec. 21, 2009 06:00 PM
Business Intelligence at Cloud Expo However, consumer comments, independent reviews, and market reports online are crucial pieces of information coming from the outside that infinitely affect any organization. Applications, blogs, social networks, and forums where content creation, sharing, and understanding takes place should be part of business intelligence. Locating and analyzing this unstructured data can only be carried out with a different kind of business intelligence solution - one we call semantic intelligence. What Is Semantic Intelligence? For example, say you're a chef and you're looking for details on how to make soup with healthier ingredients, so, you keyword search "apple stock." Try it right now - you'll get dozens upon dozens of pages about Apple, the company. If you try to narrow the search and type, "apple stock and cook," you will still get hundreds of erroneous search results about Tim Cook and Apple, the company. Semantic intelligence incorporates morphological, logical, grammatical, and natural language analysis that translates into higher precision and recall when searching for information. By providing information in the requested context and form, semantic intelligence helps organizations strategize, analyze, and make predictions because you're getting the correct data - and in these economic times, having the right foresight can save a business. There's real business value in incorporating semantic intelligence with business intelligence. Including unstructured data provides a more complete corporate picture. Semantic intelligence extracts knowledge from these sources and when combined with BI, businesses receive knowledge from structured and unstructured modalities, which will eventually be a requirement as we move into the next phase of the Web. Moving into Web 3.0 Web 2.0, in its most basic definition, is where the content consumers are also the content producers. As the Web became better designed for immediate interaction, consumers took advantage by socializing, sharing comments, and making purchases. Web 2.0 is an environment for content personalization and expression; except Web 2.0 wasn't designed to locate opinions or knowledge as intended by those content producers. Web 3.0 is becoming the age of semantics. It's the evolution of the Web where the gap between computing and human understanding is narrowing, and the information and content created by users has more "meaning." It lets the individual find, assemble, and consume only those parts of the Internet that help with one's current task. Web 3.0 works for the user rather than the consumer having to work the Web to get anything useful from it. Where this semantic-based Web 3.0 world will help businesses (not just consumers) is:
As semantic intelligence becomes more widely adopted and the natural language processing/human understanding of the Web increases, Web 3.0 will be a reality, not just a buzzword. In Web 3.0, content consumers will continue to double as content producers, and the information will become more valuable to the enterprise. With semantic intelligence added to the fray, the retrieval of that information will be as easy as finding a pizza place in New York City. Conclusion Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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