Construction of a Type Knowledge Graph Based on the Value Cognitive Turn of Characteristic Villages: An Application in Jixi, Anhui Province, China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Explanation of Core Concepts
- 1.
- Characteristic villages
- 2.
- Types of knowledge
1.2. Relevant Insights from Knowledge Graphs
1.3. Research Significance of the Type Knowledge Graph of Characteristic Villages
1.4. Research Status of the Type Knowledge Graph of Characteristic Villages
2. Materials: Characteristic Villages in Jixi
3. Theories and Methods
3.1. The Value Cognition Shift of Characteristic Villages and Towns in China
3.1.1. Analysis of Relevant Practices for the Construction of Characteristic Villages and Towns in China in Recent Years
- 1.
- Related practices
- 2.
- Functional-oriented transformation for characteristic villages and towns: industry-led development and flexible development models
- 3.
- Summary of the evolution laws of practices
3.1.2. Key Aspects of the Value Cognition of Characteristic Villages and Towns in China
- 1.
- Cognitive evolution laws of the ‘element-industry-function-type’ presented in practice
- 2.
- Turn in value cognition of characteristic villages and towns
- 3.
- Value evaluation of characteristic villages: Organic structure
3.2. Constructing a Method for the Type Knowledge Graph of Characteristic Villages
3.2.1. The Formation Process of the Type Knowledge Graph
3.2.2. The Type Knowledge Graph Expression Framework of Characteristic Villages
- 1.
- Framework of the type knowledge graph
- 2.
- Abstraction of spatial information in characteristic villages
3.2.3. Key Aspects in Constructing the Type Knowledge Graph of Characteristic Villages
- 1.
- Construction of geographic entities in characteristic villages
- 2.
- The theoretical framework of the type knowledge graph of characteristic villages
- (1)
- Differences in Geographic Entity Attributes: Various village organisms exhibit distinctions in the attributes of geographic entities, including population, income, industrial development, transportation, cultural heritage, and natural resources.
- (2)
- Attribute Perceptions Through Village Entities: These attribute differences are partially perceived and gauged by village entities, acting as information subjects [34].
- (3)
- Recording Attribute Differences: The perceived attribute disparities are recorded through diverse information forms, like entries, statistical reports, and government work reports.
- (4)
- Classification of Development Directions: Attribute differences, aligned with the connotation and attributes of characteristic villages, are categorized as distinct development directions within the village regional system. This encompasses the natural, ecosystem, economic, social, and cultural systems.
- (5)
- Reasoning and Knowledge Graph Formation: Reasoning based on the characteristic village type knowledge leads to the creation of various graphs, namely:
- (6)
- (7)
- Information Flow in Type Knowledge Cognition: The above processes constitute the fundamental information flow within the characteristic village type knowledge cognition.
- (8)
- Extended Information Flow in Cognition: Postimplementation, the implementation graph responds to the characteristic villages, forming the extended information flow within the characteristic village type knowledge cognition.
- 3.
- Hierarchical reasoning of type knowledge
4. Construction of Knowledge Graph of Characteristic Village Types in Jixi
4.1. Factual Knowledge Graph: From Information Knowledge to Cognitive Knowledge
- 1.
- Principle of construction
- 2.
- Explanation and principles of the gene information graph
- a.
- Explanation
- b.
- Principle of construction
- 3.
- The spatial unit and composition of the gene information graph
4.2. Conceptual Knowledge Graph: Cognition of the Spatial Structure
- 1.
- Research method and construction framework of the spatial structure graph of characteristic villages
- (1)
- Overall construction method
- a.
- Single Village: Initially, gene information is identified based on gene function and positional relationships. The positional relationships of the gene fragments under the dominant function are analyzed and the main gene fragments are identified. Subsequently, based on the schema information of the genes, and considering the internal connections between the main gene fragments, the spatial sequence graph for a single characteristic village is constructed. This graph aims to express the village attribute classification and functional categorization.
- b.
- Village Formations: The types, structures, characteristics, and meanings of main gene fragments across various village types are summarized. The expression goals and methods are unified to construct a horizontal graph depicting the spatial arrangement pattern.
- c.
- Village Formations (Vertical Perspective): A scientific explanation for the transitions and intersections among the ‘production-life-ecology’ environment within mountainous areas is provided. A comprehensive understanding of the geographical attributes of mountainous ‘production-life-ecology’ is thereby gained, and a spatial vertical graph can be developed for these formations.
- (2)
- Extraction of spatial structure features from the village genetic data
- a.
- Singular Aspect: The location and layout of the characteristic villages are influenced by the external geographical environment, characterized by cultivated fields and internal village layouts. Thus, constructing a characteristic village genetic data graph encompasses external geographic environment genes, internal humanistic environmental genes, and structural genes. This leads to the creation of a spatial structure graph reflecting the functional layout of the characteristic villages.
- b.
- Formations Aspect: Considering the spatial distribution patterns of the characteristic villages, the genetic data of the formations share both commonalities and differences in characteristics. Therefore, the primary content of the formations lies in the spatial distribution pattern of the villages within them.
- (3)
- Two types (three components) of spatial structure graph for characteristic villages
- a.
- The Spatial Horizontal Sequence Graphs: This graph schematically illustrates constituent elements and primary functions within the village genetic data. Analyzing spatial agglomeration and configurations allows for the condensing of corresponding spatial organizational patterns into the spatial sequence graph.
- b.
- Spatial Horizontal Distribution Pattern Graph and Spatial Vertical Distribution Graph: These graphs express the functional genetic data for the villages of the same type and fall under the formation of the genetic data graph (pertaining to villages of the same type). Generally, there exists a certain level of fuzzy-information-transmission relationship among the spatial distribution pattern graphs of the same village type. From the perspective of gene fragment attributes, a horizontal graph is referred to as a two-dimensional graph, representing graphable spatial distribution relationships; a vertical graph, on the other hand, is termed a three-dimensional graph, portraying other relationships that cannot be graphed. The graph types are depicted in Figure 8.
- 2.
- Construction and Representation of Jixi characteristic villages Spatial Graphs
- (1)
- Horizontal graph
- (2)
- Interpretation of the gene translation process in the horizontal graph
- (3)
- Vertical graph
- (4)
- Overview of the spatial structure cognition
4.3. Regular Knowledge Graph: Understanding Characteristic Production Relations
- 1.
- Characteristic production relations and local responses
- 2.
- Spatial production system of characteristic village entities
- 3.
- Graph of the embedding path of characteristic production relations
- (1)
- Formation process and layout of spatial structure
- (2)
- Graph type
- 4.
- Forecast of future development based on the embedded path of characteristic production relations
4.4. Practical Application of the Type Knowledge Graph of the Characteristc Villages
- 1.
- Type knowledge Graph expression paradigm and application value
- 2.
- Utilization level and main entities
5. Conclusions and Discussion
5.1. The Formation Process of the Type Knowledge Graph Based on ‘Information-Knowledge-Strategy’
5.2. Graph Construction and Expression Based on System Requirements from Characteristic Villages
- 1.
- The need for authenticity inspection in the development of characteristic villages
- 2.
- Transmissive needs of geographic system genetic data in characteristic villages
5.3. Possibility of Knowledge of Characteristic Villages ‘Embedding’ into Localities
5.4. Limitation of the Approach
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Translation Process | Representation of Plane Space Structure and Corresponding Pictorial Expression | ||
---|---|---|---|
The combination of mountains, forests, fields, rivers, and settlements | Circle-layered | Side-by-side | Staggered |
Landforms and village site selection | Valley type | Terrace type | Flat-land type |
Village settlement patterns | Group type | Strip type | Scattered-point type |
Village settlement road network | Flat-land–regular road network | Flat-land–spontaneous irregular road network | Mountain-plane zigzag and vertical ascent road network |
Combination of streets, lanes, and inner courtyards, and the corresponding scale relationship | Spatial sequence from street → lane → yard | All streets and lanes are all closed, narrow, and long spaces | Streets and lanes: height-to-width ratio greater than 1:1, narrow at the top and wide at the bottom |
Combination of buildings | Along the street or water system linear arrangement combination | Cluster combination | Free combination |
No. | Graph Expression Name and Results | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Distribution Mode | Classification | Representative Village | Distribution Pattern Diagram | |
1 | One of the compositions of the graph: the vertical graph of the valley/river-type landform space (characteristic villages of agricultural production, settlement landscape, ecological agriculture) | No farmland on both sides of the valley | Xionglu Village/Yangxi Village | |
Terraces on both sides of the valley | Jiuhua Village/Jiapeng Village | |||
Terraces on one side of the valley | Longchuan Village/Zhong Village | |||
Paddy fields on both sides of the valley | Jinsha Village/Congshan Village | |||
2 | The second composition of the graph: the vertical graph of the gentle landform (the characteristic villages of agricultural production, human–natural combined landscape, industrial production, emerging industries) | River beaches | Longchuan Village | |
Hilly plains | Hujia Village/Louji Village | |||
3 | The third composition of the graph: basin/platform landforms (characteristic villages of agricultural landscape, ecological protection, local and folk custom) | Basin | Yonglai Village | |
Platform | Jiapeng Village |
Embedded Path Mode | Expression Name and Schema Analysis of This Series | ||
---|---|---|---|
Types of Characteristic Villages and the Representatives | Graphic Interpretation of the Spatial Structure and Core Behavior in Representative Villages | Graphic Illustration of the Embedding Path of Characteristic Production Relations in Representative Villages | |
| Villages with characteristics of agricultural production, Jinsha Village | Spatial specialization process: spatial structure dominated by agricultural functional space (production, sales, storage), and local space (life, landscape) jointly strengthen agricultural production practices and industrial significance. Core behavior type: functional agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: line embedding dominated by specific functions; the expression factors are linearly distributed in the spatial relationship. |
Spatial layout: the village is based on a stable internal spatial layout. | |||
Villages with characteristics of settlement landscape, Wangchuan Village | Spatial specialization process: spatial structure dominated by living space; it is integrated with ecology and production; they together strengthen the local value, place meaning, and cultural context. Core behavior type: local agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: a net-like embedding under the dominance of place and meaning; expression factors are intertwined in space. | |
Spatial layout: village does value penetration with the outside through a stable internal spatial layout. | |||
Villages with characteristics of ecological protection, Jiuhua Village | Spatial specialization process: spatial structure dominated by ecological space and the local space (production, living) form a village ecological shared body, and jointly strengthen the ecological value. Core behavior type: functional agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: divergent embedding under the dominance of function. The expression factors are weakly related to each other in space. | |
Spatial layout: the internal spatial layout of the village has a greater impact on the regional ecological environment. The agglomeration layout of the internal elements is conducive to format a diffusion effect to the outside. | |||
Villages with characteristics of local and folk customs, Shuma Village | Spatial specialization process: spatial structure led by the social activity space is organically integrated with life and production space, and jointly strengthens and assumes local values and cultural emotions. Core behavior type: local agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: net-like embedding guided by place meaning. The expression factors are intertwined in space. | |
Spatial layout: village does value penetration with the outside through a stable internal spatial layout. | |||
| Villages with characteristics of industrial production, Xionglu Village | Spatial specialization process: spatial layout dominated by industrial production function space (production, sales, transportation, storage) gradually strengthens the production practice, and finally the entire village presents a linear structure spreading along the traffic line. Core behavior type: functional agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: line embedding dominated by specific functions; the expression factors are linearly distributed in the spatial relationship. |
Spatial layout: technology penetration, human penetration, and capital penetration exist between the interior and exterior of the village. | |||
Villages with characteristics of emerging industries, Langkeng Village | Spatial specialization process: spatial layout dominated by electronic commercial production space (production, sales, transportation, express delivery, telecommunications, storage) gradually strengthens the village’s e-commerce production practice, housing, and agriculture are attached spaces, and the entire village presents a cluster-like spatial structure spreading along the traffic line. Core behavior type: functional agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: line embedding dominated by specific functions; the expression factors are linearly distributed in the spatial relationship. | |
Spatial layout: technology penetration, human penetration, capital penetration, and system penetration exist between the interior and exterior of the village. A relatively stable information transmission loop is formed. | |||
| Villages with characteristics of human–natural combined landscape, Longchuan Village | Spatial specialization process: natural material space and man-made social space jointly dominate the village pattern, and form a multilateral spatial structure. There are multiple core spaces inside the village. Core behavior type: local agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: circle embedding guided by place meaning. The expression factors are interrelated in space. |
Spatial layout: The interior of the village has a relatively stable spatial layout. At the same time, the relationship between the interior and the exterior of the village is also relatively stable. The landscape production is produced by the interaction of the inside and the outside. | |||
| Villages with characteristics of ecological agriculture, Huangtukan Village | Spatial specialization process: natural ecological resources (space) and artificial production technology jointly dominate the functional layout and spatial pattern, and strengthen the village’s ecological agricultural production practice. The village forms a one-dimensional productive spatial structure. Core behavior type: combination of functionality and local agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: line embedding under the dominance of function. The expression factors are linearly distributed in the spatial relationship. |
Spatial layout: internal production space layout and structure of the village are stable, and external technical intervention is actively accepted. | |||
| Villages with characteristics of agricultural landscape, Jiapeng Village | Spatial specialization process: one of the important output results of agricultural production is the creation of seasonal landscapes. The seasonal agricultural landscape dominates the identified path of the village’s spatial structure. In order to streamline this landscape formation path, the village’s agricultural landscape production practices are constantly being strengthened. Core behavior type: combination of functionality and local agglomeration behavior. | Embedding path: the circle-layered embedding under the codominance of function and place meaning. The expression factors are arranged interactively and linearly in space. |
Spatial layout: internal production space layout and structure of the village are stable, and external technical intervention and capital is actively accepted. |
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Comparison Item | Villages of Industry-Development Leading | Villages of Flexible-Development Organism |
---|---|---|
Development goals | Pursuing agglomeration development and economies of scale | Pursuing functional and comprehensive development |
Village structure | The structure of the villages presents a vertical relationship: leading industry-dominant and others industry-supporting | The structure of villages presents a parallel relationship: the advantageous functions are parallel with other functions, and multiple functions exhibit a symbiotic state with flexible collaboration |
Characteristic connotation | Explicit industrial/material characteristics | Implicit experience/structural features |
Driving forces | From top to bottom, government intervention is the main focus | Bottom-up, mainly market and resource driven |
Production method of characteristic products | Mass and standardized production on demand | Flexible production that meets the basic functions of villages, reflecting professionalism and precision |
Role of government | Strong intervention and direct support for related industries | Inducing intervention with emphasis on infrastructure support |
Industry characteristics | There is a subordinate relationship between industries, with less competition and a focus on collaboration | Two relationships between characteristic function and other functions: competition and synergy |
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Ren, K.; Buyandelger, K. Construction of a Type Knowledge Graph Based on the Value Cognitive Turn of Characteristic Villages: An Application in Jixi, Anhui Province, China. Land 2024, 13, 9. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13010009
Ren K, Buyandelger K. Construction of a Type Knowledge Graph Based on the Value Cognitive Turn of Characteristic Villages: An Application in Jixi, Anhui Province, China. Land. 2024; 13(1):9. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13010009
Chicago/Turabian StyleRen, Kai, and Khaliun Buyandelger. 2024. "Construction of a Type Knowledge Graph Based on the Value Cognitive Turn of Characteristic Villages: An Application in Jixi, Anhui Province, China" Land 13, no. 1: 9. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13010009
APA StyleRen, K., & Buyandelger, K. (2024). Construction of a Type Knowledge Graph Based on the Value Cognitive Turn of Characteristic Villages: An Application in Jixi, Anhui Province, China. Land, 13(1), 9. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13010009