EnArgus3.0
EnArgus3.0 - Al-supported information system for energy research
Duration: 2023 – 2026
Funding: Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action of Germany
Project partners:
Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research ISI (coordination); Fraunhofer Institute for Communication, Information Processing and Ergonomics FKIE; University of Duisburg-Essen, Chair of Energy Technology; Technische Universität Berlin, Chair of Energy and Resource Management; Technical University of Darmstadt, Institute IWAR; Technische Universität Ilmenau, Institute of Media and Communication Science – Virtual Worlds and Digital Games Group
Project Description:
The contents of energy research and public energy research funding evolve constantly due to technological advances, new scientific findings, the societal discourse on climate change, and changes in the framework for energy policy making. In recent years, progress has also been made in the field of artificial intelligence.
Following up on the EnArgus2.0 project, the aim of this project is to further develop the concept and contents of the central information system for energy research funding in Germany. The aim is to use current Al to render current energy research content and make it easily and transparently accessible to public institutions and to the general public. In particular, the project focuses on how the dynamic development of energy research can be taken into account in an information system and what content is required to do so; to what extent and how ontologies used for this purpose can be supplemented by artificial intelligence; and how the content of energy research funding can be made accessible and communicated to different target groups.
EnArgus3.0 is jointly implemented by researchers from the fields of energy research, computational linguistics, and communication sciences. The Chair of Operations Management is creating more than 500 new wiki articles on terms from energy research. Our work focuses, among other things, on topics related to mobility, process industries, and fundamentals of management and economics.