@prefix this: . @prefix sub: . @prefix xsd: . @prefix dc: . @prefix prov: . @prefix pav: . @prefix np: . @prefix doco: . @prefix c4o: . sub:Head { this: np:hasAssertion sub:assertion; np:hasProvenance sub:provenance; np:hasPublicationInfo sub:pubinfo; a np:Nanopublication . } sub:assertion { sub:paragraph c4o:hasContent "While looking at the language-tagged strings in “English” (in RDF @en), Figure 6b shows that the experts perform very well when discerning whether a given value is an English text or not. The crowd was less successful in the following two situations: (i) the value corresponded to a number and the remaining data was specified in English, e.g., (St. Louis School Hong Kong, founded, 1864); and (ii) the value was a text without special characters, but in a different language than English, for example German (Woellersdorf-Stein abrueckl, Art, Marktgemeinde). The performance of both crowdsourcing approaches for the remaining datatypes were similar or not relevant due the low number of triples processed."; a doco:Paragraph . } sub:provenance { sub:assertion prov:hadPrimarySource ; prov:wasAttributedTo . } sub:pubinfo { this: dc:created "2019-09-20T18:05:11+01:00"^^xsd:dateTime; pav:createdBy . }