Forecasting Research Trends Using Knowledge Graphs and Large Language Models

Authors
Tomczak, MaciejPark, Yang JeongHsu, Chia-WeiBrown, PaydenMassa, DarioSankowski, PiotrLi, JuPapanikolaou, Stefanos
Issue Date
2025-09
Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Advanced Intelligent Systems
Abstract
Since ancient times, oracles (e.g., Delphi) has the ability to provide useful visions of where the society is headed, based on key event correlations and educated guesses. Currently, foundation models are able to distill and analyze enormous text-based data that can be used to understand where societal components are headed in the future. This work investigates the use of three large language models (LLM) and their ability to aid the research of nuclear materials. Using a large dataset of Journal of Nuclear Materials papers spanning from 2001 to 2021, models are evaluated and compared with perplexity, similarity of output, and knowledge graph metrics such as shortest path length. Models are compared to the highest performer, OpenAI's GPT-3.5. LLM-generated knowledge graphs with more than 2 x 105 nodes and 3.3 x 105 links are analyzed per publication year, and temporal tracking leads to the identification of criteria for publication innovation, controversy, influence, and future research trends.
Keywords
knowledge graphs; large language models; materials informatics; nuclear materials
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/153272
DOI
10.1002/aisy.202401124
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > Others
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