Speaker | Title | Time | Abstract | Material |
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Yihan Tao | Greetings and Introduction | 5' | ||
Alberto Accomazzi | BiblioPile: Building a Dataset to Support AI-enabled Bibliography Curation efforts | 15'+5' | A well-established way to assess the scientific impact of an observational facility in astronomy is the quantitative analysis of the studies published in the literature which have made use of the data taken by the facility. A requirement of such analysis is the creation of bibliographies which annotate and link data products with the literature, thus providing a way to use bibliometrics as an impact measure for the underlying data. An automated assistant able to emulate some of the associated activities would provide a valuable contribution to the human effort involved. LLMs have shown flexibility in interpreting and classifying scientific articles which are the basis for this curation activity. They have also been successfully used for information extraction tasks, which would help identify the specific datasets mentioned in the papers. In this talk I will describe our effort to create the BiblioPile, a contributed dataset consisting of open access fulltext papers and annotated bibliography from institutions that maintain them in order to help train AI/ML bibliographic annotation pipelines. | |
Panel + audience (Yihan Tao, Kai Polstererk, Rafael Martinez Galarza) |
Panel-led discussion | Seeding topics for discussion 1. How can state-of-the-art AI technologies, such as LLMs, fundation models and agents enhance the VO? 2. What are the potential applications of these AI technologies within the VO framework? 3. What are the best practices and strategies for integrating AI agents and models with VO tools and science platforms that can help user efficiently access to and analyse astronomical data? What are the challenges? |
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