the last speaker today is Hannah Bast talking about QLever, now showing how it compares to alternatives
@wikipathways more on Vodorezova's FDPcrawleR can be found here: https://github.com/vodor001/FDPcrawleR
second speaker is Kristina Vodorezova about FDPcrawleR, working in the ERDERA project on rare diseases
I wonder what the results are for the @wikipathways FDP
after my Scholia demo (during the poster session), now listening to two talks before the final keynote of today.
First, Yael Tirlet is speaking about SPARQL modules, so that people can focus on what they want to query, rather than how.
Thinking about my talk and that of others, we need a higher level SPARQL "programming language" indeed.
I stepped out from the session bc of a cough from last week that doesn't want to go away, and because my batteries were running out and I have a demo to give later this afternoon
I am sitting in the biohackathon area, with a RDF4RiskAssessment poster from four people from the German BfR
@bfr, is Taras Guenther or one of the other authors also on the #fediverse
we're back from lunch (no signs, so not clear what I had), and now started the first session after lunch by Samaneh Jozashoori and Nirmal Raman Kannaiyan using KGs and LLMs on literature for the purpose of drug repurposing
the second talk in the session also shows that RDF in hospitals is there. Enough that people are now focusing on querying across databases, and no longer just aligning ontologies.
Also, it shows that writing efficient SPARQL queries is something that requires tweaking SPARQL queries. The order of instructions matter, but a SPARQL query does not have a clear linear direction