Ellen Bowen
E871084
Ellen Bowen is a woman known primarily as the sister of Tom Bowen, the Australian manual therapist who founded the Bowen technique.
All labels observed (1)
| Label | Occurrences |
|---|---|
| Ellen Bowen canonical | 2 |
How this entity was disambiguated
This entity first appeared as the object of triple T9327537 — resolving that mention is where its identity was fixed. The disambiguator weighed these candidate entities and picked the highlighted one (or “None”, minting a new entity). This is how homonymy is resolved: the same surface form can point to different entities.
NED1
Entity disambiguation (via context triple)
gpt-5-mini-2025-08-07
Target entity: Ellen Bowen Context triple: [Tom Bowen, hasSibling, Ellen Bowen]
-
A.
Ellen Bowen
Ellen Bowen is a fictional character from the 1951 MGM musical film "Royal Wedding," which starred Fred Astaire.
-
B.
Ellen Lacey
Ellen Lacey is a fictional character from the 1954 film noir "Crime Wave," involved in the story’s tense criminal underworld and police investigation.
-
C.
Ellen Andrews
Ellen Andrews is the mother who magically swaps bodies with her teenage daughter in the 1976 fantasy-comedy film "Freaky Friday."
-
D.
Ellen Pierson
Ellen Pierson is a real estate professional best known for her brief marriage to the late attorney Robert Kardashian, father of the Kardashian family.
-
E.
Elizabeth Bartlett
Elizabeth Bartlett was the wife of American Revolutionary War general Peleg Wadsworth and the matriarch of a prominent New England family that included poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
- F. None of above. chosen
- G. Unsure - the case is ambiguous/there is not enough information to decide.
NED2
Entity disambiguation (via description)
gpt-5-mini-2025-08-07
Target entity: Ellen Bowen Target entity description: Ellen Bowen is a woman known primarily as the sister of Tom Bowen, the Australian manual therapist who founded the Bowen technique.
-
A.
Ellen Bowen
Ellen Bowen is a fictional character from the 1951 MGM musical film "Royal Wedding," which starred Fred Astaire.
-
B.
Ellen Lacey
Ellen Lacey is a fictional character from the 1954 film noir "Crime Wave," involved in the story’s tense criminal underworld and police investigation.
-
C.
Ellen Andrews
Ellen Andrews is the mother who magically swaps bodies with her teenage daughter in the 1976 fantasy-comedy film "Freaky Friday."
-
D.
Ellen Pierson
Ellen Pierson is a real estate professional best known for her brief marriage to the late attorney Robert Kardashian, father of the Kardashian family.
-
E.
Elizabeth Bartlett
Elizabeth Bartlett was the wife of American Revolutionary War general Peleg Wadsworth and the matriarch of a prominent New England family that included poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
- F. None of above. chosen
Statements (8)
| Predicate | Object |
|---|---|
| instanceOf | human ⓘ |
| countryOfCitizenship |
Australia
ⓘ
Australia ⓘ |
| notableFor | founding the Bowen technique ⓘ |
| occupation | manual therapist ⓘ |
| sexOrGender |
female
ⓘ
male ⓘ |
| sibling | Tom Bowen NERFINISHED ⓘ |
How these facts were elicited
The pipeline generated the facts above by prompting gpt-5.1 with this entity's name + description and the instruction below.
Instruction
You are a knowledge base construction expert. Given a subject entity and a description of it, return factual statements that you know for the subject as a JSON list of dictionaries(triples), where keys must be "subject", "predicate" and "object". The number of facts may be very high, between 25 to 50 or more, for very popular subjects. For less popular subjects, the number of facts can be very low, like 5 or 10. # Requirements - If you don't know the subject at all, return an empty list. - If the subject is not a named entity, return an empty list. - Include at least one triple where predicate is "instanceOf". - Do not get too wordy. - Separate several objects into multiple triples with one object.
Input
Subject: Ellen Bowen Description of subject: Ellen Bowen is a woman known primarily as the sister of Tom Bowen, the Australian manual therapist who founded the Bowen technique.
Referenced by (2)
Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.