Bibliographic Network
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A Bibliographic Network is an Information Network that is derived from a Bibliographic Database.
- See: Semantic Network, Author, Publication, Citation Relation, Co-Citation Relationship, Publication Venue, Published-In Relation, Citation Network, Publication Date.
References
2009
- (Sun et al., 2009) ⇒ Yizhou Sun, Yintao Yu, and Jiawei Han. (2009). “Ranking-based Clustering of Heterogeneous Information Networks with Star Network Schema.” In: Proceedings of the 15th ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-2009). doi:10.1145/1557019.1557107
- QUOTE: Example 1.1 (Bibliographic Information Network): A bibliographic network consists of rich information about research papers, each written by a group of authors, using a set of terms, and published in a venue (a conference or a journal). Such a bibliographic network is composed of four types of objects: authors, venues, terms, and papers. Links exist between papers and authors by the relation of “write” and “written by”, between papers and terms by the relation of “contain” and “contained in”, between papers and venues by the relation of “publish” and “published by”. …