A data dump of all the current facts and assertions in the Freebase system.
Freebase is an open database of the worlds information, covering millions of topics in hundreds of categories. Drawing from large open data sets like Wikipedia, MusicBrainz, and the SEC archi …
The Freebase Wikipedia Extraction (WEX) is a processed dump of the English language Wikipedia. The wiki markup for each article is transformed into machine-readable XML, and common relational features such as templates, infoboxes, categories, article sections, and redirects are extracted intabul …
DBpedia is a community effort to extract structured information from Wikipedia and to make this information available on the Web. The DBpedia knowledge base currently describes more than 2.6 million things, including at least 213,000 persons, 328,000 places, 57,000 music albums, 36,000 films, 20,0 …
This data comes from a scrape of the Twitter social network conducted by the Monkeywrench Consultancy. The full scrape consists of 35 million users, 500 million tweets, and 1 billion relationships between users.
This dataset is a mapping between the user IDs used for Twitter Search;…
features_and_friends.csv
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This file contains 33 image features for 19,217 MySpace profile pictures. Also
included is the number of friends for each user in the sample.
The columns are (roughly):
n – Number of brightness levels
pn – A measure of the …
The file karate.gml contains the network of friendships between the 34 members of a karate club at a US university, as described by Wayne Zachary in 1977.
If you use these data in your work, please cite W. W. Zachary, An information flow model for conflict and fission in small groups, Journal …
The file karate.gml contains the network of friendships between the 34 members of a karate club at a US university, as described by Wayne Zachary in 1977.
If you use these data in your work, please cite W. W. Zachary, An information flow model for conflict and fission in small groups, Journal …
Coappearance network of characters in the novel Les Miserables. Please cite D. E. Knuth, The Stanford GraphBase: A Platform for Combinatorial Computing, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA (1993).
Adjacency network of common adjectives and nouns in the novel David Copperfield by Charles Dickens. Please cite M. E. J. Newman, Phys. Rev. E 74, 036104 (2006).