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Learning Microsoft Cognitive Services

You're reading from   Learning Microsoft Cognitive Services Create intelligent apps with vision, speech, language, and knowledge capabilities using Microsoft Cognitive Services

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786467843
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Leif Larsen Henning Larsen Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
Author Profile Icon Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Microsoft Cognitive Services FREE CHAPTER 2. Analyzing Images to Recognize a Face 3. Analyzing Videos 4. Letting Applications Understand Commands 5. Speak with Your Application 6. Understanding Text 7. Extending Knowledge Based on Context 8. Querying Structured Data in a Natural Way 9. Adding Specialized Searches 10. Connecting the Pieces Appendix A. LUIS Entities and Intents 1. Appendix B. Additional Information on Linguistic Analysis 2. Appendix C. License Information

Creating the backend using the Knowledge Exploration Service


The Knowledge Exploration Service (KES) is, in some ways, the backend for the Academic API. It allows us to build a compressed index from structured data, authoring grammar to interpret natural language.

To get started with KES, we need to install the service locally.

With the installation comes some example data, which we will use.

The steps required to have a working service are as follows:

  1. Define a schema.

  2. Generate data.

  3. Build the index.

  4. Author grammar.

  5. Compile grammar.

  6. Host service.

Defining attributes

The schema file defines the attribute structure in our domain. When we previously discussed the Academic API, we saw a list of different entity attributes, which we could retrieve through the queries. This is defined in a schema.

If you open the file, Academic.schema, in the Example folder found where KES is installed, you will see...

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